Helmut Kipphan
Handbook of Print Media
13
This handbook is a comprehensive guide to both the traditional
lecturers,...
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Helmut Kipphan
Handbook of Print Media
13
This handbook is a comprehensive guide to both the traditional
lecturers, trainees and students at training centers, colleges,
and new, digital technologies involved in all phases of print
polytechs and universities. The content of the Handbook is based
media production. Electronic media and multimedia are also explained and positioned. The technologies and production
on the German edition, translated in cooperation with an international team of translators with experience in publishing
systems covered are state-of-the-art and represent a multitude of
and graphic arts subjects.
products from well-known manufacturers worldwide.
The easy to find, reliable information supports and complements
The relative positions the printing processes occupy are given on
the skills of the professional in the field, while offering manage-
the basis of performance features and the market sectors of print
ment orientation in reaching strategic and investment decisions
media, while trends for print media production are also highlighted. As a detailed reference and also standard work, this book is the ideal companion for technically and commercially-oriented specialists and management in the graphic arts industry. As for printshops, prepress and postpress operations, publishing houses, the supporting industry and trade associations, this book is also invaluable for experts working on research projects,
and providing students with a sound basis of usable knowledge. The detailed, colored layout and the many pictures, graphics and tables support this easy to use structure. The robust design of the Handbook ensures a long service life, even with daily use. The accompanying CD-ROM enables the reader to perform a full text search within the entire book, and guides him through the comprehensive texts and pictures.
Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Helmut Kipphan Born 1943 in Heidelberg (Germany). Apprenticeship as a toolmaker and employed in Manufacturing and Design at Schnellpressenfabrik AG Heidelberg (1957-1963). Studied mechanical engineering at the University of Applied Sciences in Mannheim and then at the University of Karlsruhe. 1971 Scientific Assistant at the Institute for Measurement and Automation Control Engineering with Machine Laboratory of the University of Karlsruhe. In 1975 doctoral thesis on Correlation Measurement Techniques and Identification Processes for Industrial Applications. In 1979 post-doctoral thesis and »habilitation« in Measurement Technique and Systems, teaching as lecturer at the University of Karlsruhe, in 1985 appointed professor. 1978 employment at Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG as research engineer. Projects in printing technology processes, automation, measurement and control techniques in printing
system engineering. Managerial and senior managerial positions in the fields of research and development, sheet-fed and web offset printing, technology transfer, patenting and education. Since 1992 responsible for Technology and Innovation Research, thus working in all areas of the graphic arts industry, particularly in the fields of advanced and new technologies for print media production. Intensive cooperation with customers, companies and institutes around the world, regarding new technologies, product improvements, further and new developments. Involvement and management positions on committees for industrial joint research in mechanical engineering and the graphic arts industry within national and international associations and organizations. Since 1998 cooperation with a team of authors from the fields of science, research, education and training, academia and industry and an international team of translators to create and publish both a German and an English edition of the Handbook of Print Media. Responsible as project manager, scientific director, main author and editor, representing Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG in cooperation with Springer.
The CD-ROM is only available in combination with the hardcover version of the Handbook of Print Media.
Title
Helmut Kipphan (Ed.)
Handbook of Print Media Technologies and Production Methods
Including 1275 figures, mostly in color and 92 tables
123
Impressum
Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Kurfürsten-Anlage 52–60 69115 Heidelberg Germany
isbn 3-540-67326-1 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York Cataloging-in-Publication Data applied for Handbook of print media : technologies and production methods / ed. Helmut Kipphan. – Berlin ; Heidelberg ; New York ; Barcelona ; Hongkong ; London ; Milan ; Paris ; Singapore ; Tokyo : Springer, 2001 isbn 3-540-67326-1 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilm or in other ways, and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9, 1965, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer-Verlag. Violations are liable for prosecution under German Copyright Law. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York a member of BertelsmannSpringer Science+Business Media GmbH http://www.springer.de © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2001 Printed in Germany The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. Cover design: de’blik, Berlin Production manager: Ursula Weisgerber Typesetting and layout: medio Technologies AG, Berlin Printing: Zechner Datenservice und Druck, Speyer; sheet-fed offset, Heidelberg Speedmaster SM 102-6-P Finishing: Fikentscher, Darmstadt spin: 10764981 62/3020 – Printed on acid-free paper – 5 4 3 2 1 0 © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
V
Preface
The German edition of the Handbook of Print Media – Technologies and Production Methods was published and introduced to the market during the book fair in Frankfurt/Main in October 2000. The translation work for the English edition was started in 1999 immediately after the manuscripts for the German edition had been prepared. The translation of the German preface follows this preface. The German preface describes in detail the origins of this handbook, the goals regarding contents and readership, and in particular the comprehensive cooperation with experts from academia and industry in the fields of science, research, development, education and from publishing and the communication industry worldwide. I have expressed my recognition and gratitude to the many experts and partners in this cooperation and would like to do so again here. The translation for the English edition was done by a team of international translators, headed by Dr. René Bosewitz (The Translators AG, Heidelberg, Germany). The proof-reading and refinement, especially regarding specialist terminology and the optimization of the description of the technical content, was supported from the beginning by Professor Frank Romano and Professor Frank Cost of the RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology)/College of Imaging Arts & Science in Rochester/NY (USA) and myself. In my capacity as editor, author within the large group of authors,and project manager I was responsible for the content of the handbook and its scientific and technical quality. I was deeply involved in the process of enhancing the translation and learned a lot with the translators when explaining the technical facts,answering questions and showing what had to be described. This handbook is, therefore, not “only” a translation of the German edition. It includes many improvements, additional information and descriptions in text, © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
pictures and graphs for enhancing the educational and technological presentation. The handbook is written in “international” English. The rules for syllable separation and punctuation are based mainly on “Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary”, and “The Chicago Manual of Style”. The typographical details, the fonts and page layout are optimized for easy reading. I would like to thank the whole team working on the translation, especially the afore-mentioned experts for their patience, efforts and support in creating a valuable international handbook, which is now ready for worldwide use. The units for technical specification/quantities are stated in the international SI-system (metric) and only a few quantities are stated additionally in imperial units directly in the text. Detailed tables of physical/technical quantities and conversions are given in Section 14.2. We took special care to choose terminology which is used and understandable worldwide and exploited this consistently throughout the whole book (sometimes giving additional terms). This was a great challenge and the reader should excuse us if some terms are different from those he is familiar with. The bibliography (references and further reading) in the several sections/chapters is basically identical to that of the German edition. There is, however, some additional information from international publications to support the English speaking readership. In any case where an English edition exists we added this in or replaced the German edition with this. Most of the addresses, for example of research institutes and associations, are stated in their native language. We have not given a translation for these. If official names exist in English, in some cases we have substituted them for the German or added them in.
VI
Preface
Together with best regards and wishes from Bernhard Schreier (Dipl.-Ing.), the Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG to all readers, partners and experts from the printing, publishing and communications industry, I hope and trust both personally and on behalf of Heidelberg that readers will gain an equal amount of pleasure and profit from this book, the Handbook of Print Media. It should contribute to ensuring the continuing economic, high-quality production and availability of print media in today’s age of information – both in conjunction as well as in competition with electronic
media. The handbook should also help to ensure that the influence of innovations, advanced and new technologies, market and customer demands on these industries and their further growth be evolutionary rather than revolutionary, and that print media continue to contribute to the maintenance, expansion and further development of a high degree of education, culture, progress and quality of life throughout the world. Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Heidelberg, December 2000
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
VII
Preface of the German Edition
The technological change and evolution in the printing, publishing and communications industry and increasing market requirements in terms of quality, costs and distribution of print media, have led to a considerable change in the technologies and processes used for their production. Digitalization, automation, synergistic technologies and innovations are further signs of improvements, developments and new production methods and processes. Demand on print media is also influenced by the spread of electronic media together with new possibilities in information storage and availability, production and design of print media and the creation of new multimedia products, in particular as well as the workflow stages involved in media production. Processes and equipment used to produce print media require the use of a wide range of innovative technologies and components from all areas of technology and industry – the need for cross-functional, interdisciplinary working is particularly strong in the graphic arts industry and therefore involves cooperating with partners from many industrial sectors. It is the advances in computer and networking technology, digital control and processing of production equipment within the total production chain in print media creation – that is from concept to the final print media product – which more than anything else have enabled the traditional production areas of prepress, press and postpress to evolve together and be realized for practical use. Digital workflow has become a reality, Computer to ... technologies characterize production with their wide range of possibilities for realizing digital print production. Novel printing technologies, production methods and strategies have become possible and are being used in practice. Digitalization has also created the premedia sector in which information for distribution is created as a digital master that forms the basis for duplication via both print media and electronic media. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
In order to produce and supply media products and services, companies, management and technical personnel, trainees, teachers and instructors must adapt equally to existing and continually developing new structures, technologies and opportunities in today’s information society. Investment decisions must be made from a commercial, technical, market and customer-specific point of view, based on a wide range of business and technical performance factors and criteria. Information and knowledge on this meteoric development and new possibilities have been published in numerous books and papers in technical literature and presented and discussed at national and international symposia and conferences, but mostly only describing specific subjects. However, it is difficult for the individual to keep up-to-date and form a comprehensive picture based on traditional technologies and processes. In this respect the far reaching content and didactic design of the Handbook of Print Media should make it an essential aid and tool in everyday practice. The original ideas for producing a handbook of print media are based on my conversations in June 1996 with Dr. Hubertus v. Riedesel (Dipl.-Phys.) of the Springer Publishing Company in Heidelberg during one of the symposia of the “Rhein-Neckar – discussion group for Physical Research in Industry and University” (an initiative of the University of Heidelberg and the industry). Conversations between the management of the publishing house, and Hartmut Mehdorn (Dipl.-Ing.), Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG at that time, and myself provided the impetus for putting these ideas into practice. Fascination with the wide range of subject matter and products of the graphic arts industry and the experience of two successful globally active enterprises based in the same city of Heidelberg led to the unanimous decision by the Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG in December 1997 to publish the “Handbook of Print Me-
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Preface of the German Edition
dia – Technologies and Production Methods” in German in the year 2000 and an English edition soon after. It was, in particular, Hartmut Mehdorn, who undertook to meet the urgent need for further education and training in the printing and publishing industry and supported the project through his creative and extremely active involvement. The following events lend particular significance to the year 2000 for the graphic arts industry and Heidelberg: the 600th birthday of Johannes Gutenberg, the inventor of letterpress printing using movable metallic type, the required tools and a printing press; the 150th anniversary of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG and, linked to this, the inauguration of the Print Media Academy based in Heidelberg. With the Print Media Academy as a new center for communication, qualifications and knowledge within a worldwide network for the whole printing and publishing industry, and the Handbook of Print Media, Heidelberg continues to contribute to the improvement and dissemination of knowledge about the requirements of industry and promote the advancement of the graphic arts and communications industry. An examination of the current literature showed that a large number of good text books and much educational literature is already available, covering most subjects and areas of the printing and publishing industry as well as a large quantity of individual publications, but also that there is considerable demand for an up-to-date, clear and comprehensive presentation of the whole subject. Thus, the concept of the handbook took shape, whose main focus was the need to give state-of-the-art treatment to the whole spectrum of modern print media production and to make clear, topical facts available, explaining subjects, such as the following in particular: • traditional technologies and new innovative processes in all stages of production; • detailed treatment of novel digital printing technologies, especially non-impact printing processes; • the positioning of print media, electronic media and multimedia; • the positioning of the various printing processes based on their performance characteristics and the market segments of print media; • presentation of the trends in the production of print media, taking economic and technological requirements into account;
• training, education, research, development trends and strategies; • state-of-the-art production equipment, systems and technologies, taking account of the products of numerous well known manufacturers from around the world; • environmental protection and safety technology; • historical evolution of printing; • reviews of standards, norms, training centers and research establishments, societies, associations and organizations of the printing and publishing industry, as well as international technical conferences, etc. The handbook should therefore serve as a standard reference for technical communication and further education; it should provide technical personnel and managers of printing and publishing houses, of the graphic arts and communications industry, supply industry, scientific bodies, trade associations and experts in research and education, trainees and students with comprehensive information. In addition, however, it should give those who are not familiar with the industry the opportunity to learn about the theory and practice of print media production and to develop an awareness of new areas. The wide scope of the handbook means that there has been a deliberate use of repetition in the individual chapters. This enables the reader to first become familiar with the broad area of a subject and then use crossreferencing to study the complementary information given in other chapters. The handbook provides a solid foundation for acquiring basic information and gaining an understanding and knowledge of the subjects’ interrelationships. References to specialist and complementary literature help to provide more in-depth information. It represents a building block and reference work for training programs and further education – also in the context of the programs of the Print Media Academy – and is aimed at an international readership having a broad range of different interests. The CD-ROM that accompanies the handbook makes it a true multimedia product. The CD-ROM includes the complete handbook, enables a full text search and contains additional aids to provide a convenient and focused method of searching and information gathering. It also provides a user friendly guide to the extensive text and the numerous figures. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Preface
There is an up-to-date explanation of the state-of-theart with respect to subject matter, referring in general to the end of 1999. However, many new products and technologies, which were not to be publicized until May 2000 at Drupa (the world’s largest exhibition of print media) have already been taken into account. Statements on the trends and forecasts are based on current facts and extensive experience as well as information obtained around the world. The editor and publisher have agreed to update the handbook in subsequent editions, so that it forms a standard work for the production of print media. It is with pleasure that I undertook the extremely stimulating tasks which Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG entrusted to me as leader of the project to create the handbook, as well as taking charge of the technical content, and acting as the editor. This afforded me a particular opportunity and responsibility for creating and making the subject matter available while Springer, in close cooperation, undertook the production and marketing. The diverse subject matter as well as Heidelberg’s aim to represent technologies, products and systems as independent of their manufacturer as possible led from the outset to the idea of creating the handbook by employing a team of authors drawn from science, research, education, academia and industry. This was coupled with the skill, knowledge, competence and experience of the Heidelberg Group, but predominantly with external authors. One of the greatest challenges was to set up the team of authors, to discuss and agree on the subject matter and content, to match the authors to the current tasks and to complement the team during the editing process. The initial meeting of a core team of authors took place in Heidelberg in March 1998. Additional authors were still being included in the team until August 1999. A great deal of thanks is due to all authors. They performed their tasks well and were willing to agree to suggestions and improvements so that the handbook could appear to come “from a single mold” despite the large number of authors. Thanks also go to the many experts, who are not named here but whose words and deeds contributed to the content and progress of the project. Professor Arved C. Hübler (Dr.-Ing.) and Professor Wolfgang Beier (Dr.-Ing.) of the Institute for Printing and Media Technology at the Technical University of © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Chemnitz supported the coordination of the technical matter. In closest collaboration with the editor they contributed to ensuring that the manuscripts met the quality demanded of the handbook in terms of content and educational value, and that the contributions were as consistent as possible. The English translation of the handbook was begun immediately following production of the German manuscript. The English translation team was supported by international experts with experience in the graphic arts industry, Professor Frank Cost and Professor Frank Romano of the RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology)/College of Imaging Arts & Sciences in Rochester/NY (USA). They undertook the task of performing a general check of the translations produced regarding the language and then once again for content, resulting in a number of improvements. This also meant that the experience and interests of international experts, teachers and readers could be taken into account to an even greater extent. Special thanks are also due to the employees in my department of Technology & Innovation Research, Dr. Martin Schmitt-Lewen (Dipl.-Phys.) and Walter d’Heureuse (Dipl.-Ing.), who continually supported me during the whole project through their critical and constructive contributions on the clarification of technical questions, but also for their patience and understanding in the often difficult situations caused by scheduling. Special mention goes to their support in working on the manuscripts for proof-reading and correction as well as searching for and acquiring material for illustrations. Thanks also to SciTech Consultants GmbH/Heidelberg, Germany, who worked in close cooperation with us from the beginning of the project regarding communication and timing between the various parties for both the German and English edition. The work included the competent and accurate proof-reading of all the versions of the chapters right up to going to print. I am particularly keen to thank all of the companies, experts and customers all over the world for the many conversations, the advice, suggestions and constructive criticism on the wide range of subjects and queries on the production of print media and the demands on the means of production. It was only with this information and support, mainly based on years of close cooperation and continual personal contacts, that we could take an up-to-date and comprehensive view of the
IX
X
Preface of the German Edition
interests and requirements of the users of production equipment and systems as well as their customers. This applies both to the gathering of the material for the book and the handling and treatment of the individual topics. This ensured that the handbook relates to industrial practice, lends equal support to owners, managers and employees in the various workplaces of a printing/publishing company and also offers trainees and students useful, practice-oriented information, knowledge, skill and experience. Many thanks also for the support received from colleagues and experts in the Heidelberg Group worldwide as well as the numerous contacts in companies in the supply industry, partners in cooperation and competitors, as well as experts and partners in institutions and organizations for industrial and academic research.
time and to make it available to a broad readership. It was always a common goal for me, Heidelberg and Springer to produce the very highest quality. Readers and users of the handbook are urged to provide suggestions and advice on how it may be updated and improved. This information will help in the preparation of a subsequent edition broadly based on a desire for continuous improvement.
The selection and creation of illustrations posed a particular challenge and represented a subject of special interest to me personally, firstly with respect to the quality of the images and secondly from the point of view of a representative selection of examples of products from as many suppliers as possible. Special thanks to all companies and experts whose understanding and helpfulness provided us with illustrations and information either directly or indirectly. Great care has been taken to name all sources; if there are omissions, please accept our apologies.
Personally and on behalf of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG and together with the best regards and wishes of the Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberg, Bernhard Schreier (Dipl.-Ing.) to all readers, partners and experts in the printing, publishing and communications industry, I hope and trust that readers will gain an equal amount of pleasure and profit from this book, the Handbook of Print Media. It should help in allowing print media to continue to be produced and supplied economically and in high quality in today’s age of information – both in conjunction as well as in competition with electronic media. It should also mean that the influence of innovations, advanced technologies and market and customer demands on these industries and their further development will be evolutionary rather than revolutionary and that print media will continue to contribute to the maintenance, expansion and further growth of a high degree of education, culture, progress and quality of life throughout the world.
The skills, competencies, abilities, experiences and partners of the Heidelberg Group and Springer were used to produce a high-quality handbook in terms of content, illustration and design in a relatively short
Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Heidelberg, April 2000
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
XI
Authors and their Contributions
As explained in the preface, a team of authors from science, research, academia and industry was formed to create the handbook. Editing of the diverse and comprehensive subject matter resulted from close cooperation with Professor Helmut Kipphan (Dr.-Ing. habil.), the editor, who was also in charge of the content and scope of the handbook, its technical and scientific quality and who is also the main author. Many contributions – sections as well as complete chapters – were produced by individual authors. Numerous sections also arose out of the cooperation of several authors, mainly author and co-author. Co-authors are named if they have made important contri-
butions to the content and scope of the section. Sections or chapters which were written by one author in total or as the main author, are in bold print in the following list, while co-authors are named for sections or chapters in normal type (for contributions which are roughly equal there is no distinction made between author and co-author). All contributions to the handbook were edited with a desire for unity of style of text, images and graphics, a clear structure and an educationally useful design with the support of the editor’s staff, colleagues and the coordinators in cooperation with all of the authors.
Beier, Wolfgang, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Print- und Medientechnik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, (Institute for Print and Media Technology, Technical University of Chemnitz), Chemnitz 1.4.5 • 2.3 • 3.1 (without 3.1.7) • 14.1.1, 14.2 • 15.
Dörner, Gerhard O., Dipl.-Ing. Berufsgenossenschaft Druck und Papierverarbeitung, (Institution for Statutory Accident Insurance and Prevention in the Printing and Paper Converting Industry),Wiesbaden 13.2.2.
Brües, Stefan, Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Kommunikationstechnologie-Druck, Bergische Universität-Gesamthochschule Wuppertal, (Department of Communication Technology – Print Media, University of Wuppertal), Wuppertal 1.4.1, 1.4.2 • 3.2.6, 3.2.9, 3.2.11.
Friedl, Friedrich, Prof. Hochschule für Gestaltung, (Art Academy), Offenbach 1.2.1.
Dalton, Keith, BSc (Hons) Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 1.1.4, 1.1.5 • 13.3. Dolezalek, Friedrich, Ph.D. FOGRA Forschungsgesellschaft Druck e.V., (Graphic Technology Research Association), München 3.1.7, 3.2.2 • 13.2.3 • 14.4, 14.5, 14.6. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fuchs, Boris, Dipl.-Ing. Frankenthal 1.6.2.2, 1.9.2 • 2.1.3, 2.1.6.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.2, 2.2.4 • 8.1.1 (without 8.1.1.5) • 13.1.1. Hübler, Arved C., Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Print- und Medientechnik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, (Institute for Print and Media Technology, Technical University of Chemnitz), Chemnitz 1.9.1, 1.9.3 • 8.1.2, 8.1.3 • 9.1, 9.2 • 14.5–14.7 • 15.
XII
Authors and their Contributions
Ipsen, Heiner, Prof., Dipl.-Ing. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 2.4, 2.5.4.
Ritz, Axel, Prof., Dipl.-Phys. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 1.4.5 • 2.1.2.
Kern, Jürgen, Dr. rer. nat. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 13.2.1.
Ruder, Rudolf, Prof. em. Dr.-Ing. habil., Dr.-Ing. E.h. Chemnitz 1.6.1, 1.6.2.1.
Kipphan, Helmut, Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 1.1.1, 1.1.3, 1.2, 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.3.3, 1.4.1–1.4.4, 1.4.5, 1.5, 1.5.2.8, 1.7 • 2.1.1, 2.1.2, 2.1.3, 2.1.4, 2.1.5, 2.1.6.1, 2.1.6.2, 2.1.7, 2.3, 2.4.3, 2.5.1, 2.5.3 • 3.2.1, 3.2.7, 3.2.8, 3.2.11 • 4.1, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 • 5.1–5.9 • 6.1–6.4 • 7.1–7.3 • 8.1.1.5, 8.2 • 9.1.2–9.1.4, 9.2 • 10.1–10.5 • 11.1, 11.6, 11.7 • 12.1–12.4 • 13.1.1, 13.1.3.5 • 14.1.1, 14.1.2, 14.1.3, 14.2, 14.3.1, 14.3.2, 14.5–14.7 • 15.
Schläpfer, Kurt, Prof. Dr. Eidgenössische Materialprüfungs- und Forschungsanstalt (EMPA), (Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Testing), St. Gallen, Switzerland 3.2.3, 3.2.10.
Liebetruth, Hartmann, Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Kommunikationstechnologie-Druck, Bergische Universität-Gesamthochschule Wuppertal, (Department of Communication Technology – Print Media, University of Wuppertal), Wuppertal 13.1.2. Nestler, Rainer, Prof. Dr.-Ing. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 1.8 • 7.1–7.3. Neumann, Richard, Dipl.-Ing. Lengerich 1.6.2.3 • 2.2.3, 2.3. Nicolay, Klaus-Peter, Dipl.-Ing. Arcus Communications & Design, Bruttig-Fankel 3.2.1, 3.2.4, 3.2.5, 3.2.7, 3.2.8, 3.2.11, 3.2.12.
Schönhut, Jürgen, Dr. phil. Fraunhofer-Institut für Grafische Datenverarbeitung (IGD), (Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics), Darmstadt 1.1.1, 1.1.2, 1.1.3, 1.2.2–1.2.4, 1.2.5, 1.2.6 • 8.2 • 11.1, 11.2–11.5, 11.6, 11.7. Seydel, Michael, Dr.-Ing. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 4.2, 4.3. Tessmann, Uwe, Dr.-Ing. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 13.1.3 (without 13.1.3.5). Thomas, Hermann, Dipl.-Ing. Darmstadt 2.5.1–2.5.3. Walenski, Wolfgang Bergisch-Gladbach 1.5 (without 1.5.2.8).
Rech, Helmut, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Technologie & Planung Druck, Hochschule der Künste, (The Berlin University of Arts), Berlin 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.7 • 2.1.1. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Helmut Kipphan Born 1943 in Heidelberg (Germany). Apprenticeship as a toolmaker and employed in Manufacturing and Design at Schnellpressenfabrik AG Heidelberg (1957-1963). Studied mechanical engineering at the University of Applied Sciences in Mannheim and then at the University of Karlsruhe. 1971 Scientific Assistant at the Institute for Measurement and Automation Control Engineering with Machine Laboratory of the University of Karlsruhe. In 1975 doctoral thesis on Correlation Measurement Techniques and Identification Processes for Industrial Applications. In 1979 post-doctoral thesis and »habilitation« in Measurement Technique and Systems, teaching as lecturer at the University of Karlsruhe, in 1985 appointed professor. 1978 employment at Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG as research engineer. Projects in printing technology processes, automation, measurement and control techniques in printing
system engineering. Managerial and senior managerial positions in the fields of research and development, sheet-fed and web offset printing, technology transfer, patenting and education. Since 1992 responsible for Technology and Innovation Research, thus working in all areas of the graphic arts industry, particularly in the fields of advanced and new technologies for print media production. Intensive cooperation with customers, companies and institutes around the world, regarding new technologies, product improvements, further and new developments. Involvement and management positions on committees for industrial joint research in mechanical engineering and the graphic arts industry within national and international associations and organizations. Since 1998 cooperation with a team of authors from the fields of science, research, education and training, academia and industry and an international team of translators to create and publish both a German and an English edition of the Handbook of Print Media. Responsible as project manager, scientific director, main author and editor, representing Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG in cooperation with Springer.
Title
Helmut Kipphan (Ed.)
Handbook of Print Media Technologies and Production Methods
Including 1275 figures, mostly in color and 92 tables
123
Impressum
Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Kurfürsten-Anlage 52–60 69115 Heidelberg Germany
isbn 3-540-67326-1 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York Cataloging-in-Publication Data applied for Handbook of print media : technologies and production methods / ed. Helmut Kipphan. – Berlin ; Heidelberg ; New York ; Barcelona ; Hongkong ; London ; Milan ; Paris ; Singapore ; Tokyo : Springer, 2001 isbn 3-540-67326-1 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilm or in other ways, and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9, 1965, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer-Verlag. Violations are liable for prosecution under German Copyright Law. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York a member of BertelsmannSpringer Science+Business Media GmbH http://www.springer.de © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2001 Printed in Germany The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. Cover design: de’blik, Berlin Production manager: Ursula Weisgerber Typesetting and layout: medio Technologies AG, Berlin Printing: Zechner Datenservice und Druck, Speyer; sheet-fed offset, Heidelberg Speedmaster SM 102-6-P Finishing: Fikentscher, Darmstadt spin: 10764981 62/3020 – Printed on acid-free paper – 5 4 3 2 1 0 © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
XI
Authors and their Contributions
As explained in the preface, a team of authors from science, research, academia and industry was formed to create the handbook. Editing of the diverse and comprehensive subject matter resulted from close cooperation with Professor Helmut Kipphan (Dr.-Ing. habil.), the editor, who was also in charge of the content and scope of the handbook, its technical and scientific quality and who is also the main author. Many contributions – sections as well as complete chapters – were produced by individual authors. Numerous sections also arose out of the cooperation of several authors, mainly author and co-author. Co-authors are named if they have made important contri-
butions to the content and scope of the section. Sections or chapters which were written by one author in total or as the main author, are in bold print in the following list, while co-authors are named for sections or chapters in normal type (for contributions which are roughly equal there is no distinction made between author and co-author). All contributions to the handbook were edited with a desire for unity of style of text, images and graphics, a clear structure and an educationally useful design with the support of the editor’s staff, colleagues and the coordinators in cooperation with all of the authors.
Beier, Wolfgang, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Print- und Medientechnik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, (Institute for Print and Media Technology, Technical University of Chemnitz), Chemnitz 1.4.5 • 2.3 • 3.1 (without 3.1.7) • 14.1.1, 14.2 • 15.
Dörner, Gerhard O., Dipl.-Ing. Berufsgenossenschaft Druck und Papierverarbeitung, (Institution for Statutory Accident Insurance and Prevention in the Printing and Paper Converting Industry),Wiesbaden 13.2.2.
Brües, Stefan, Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Kommunikationstechnologie-Druck, Bergische Universität-Gesamthochschule Wuppertal, (Department of Communication Technology – Print Media, University of Wuppertal), Wuppertal 1.4.1, 1.4.2 • 3.2.6, 3.2.9, 3.2.11.
Friedl, Friedrich, Prof. Hochschule für Gestaltung, (Art Academy), Offenbach 1.2.1.
Dalton, Keith, BSc (Hons) Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 1.1.4, 1.1.5 • 13.3. Dolezalek, Friedrich, Ph.D. FOGRA Forschungsgesellschaft Druck e.V., (Graphic Technology Research Association), München 3.1.7, 3.2.2 • 13.2.3 • 14.4, 14.5, 14.6. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fuchs, Boris, Dipl.-Ing. Frankenthal 1.6.2.2, 1.9.2 • 2.1.3, 2.1.6.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.2, 2.2.4 • 8.1.1 (without 8.1.1.5) • 13.1.1. Hübler, Arved C., Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Print- und Medientechnik, Technische Universität Chemnitz, (Institute for Print and Media Technology, Technical University of Chemnitz), Chemnitz 1.9.1, 1.9.3 • 8.1.2, 8.1.3 • 9.1, 9.2 • 14.5–14.7 • 15.
XII
Authors and their Contributions
Ipsen, Heiner, Prof., Dipl.-Ing. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 2.4, 2.5.4.
Ritz, Axel, Prof., Dipl.-Phys. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 1.4.5 • 2.1.2.
Kern, Jürgen, Dr. rer. nat. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 13.2.1.
Ruder, Rudolf, Prof. em. Dr.-Ing. habil., Dr.-Ing. E.h. Chemnitz 1.6.1, 1.6.2.1.
Kipphan, Helmut, Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 1.1.1, 1.1.3, 1.2, 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.3.3, 1.4.1–1.4.4, 1.4.5, 1.5, 1.5.2.8, 1.7 • 2.1.1, 2.1.2, 2.1.3, 2.1.4, 2.1.5, 2.1.6.1, 2.1.6.2, 2.1.7, 2.3, 2.4.3, 2.5.1, 2.5.3 • 3.2.1, 3.2.7, 3.2.8, 3.2.11 • 4.1, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 • 5.1–5.9 • 6.1–6.4 • 7.1–7.3 • 8.1.1.5, 8.2 • 9.1.2–9.1.4, 9.2 • 10.1–10.5 • 11.1, 11.6, 11.7 • 12.1–12.4 • 13.1.1, 13.1.3.5 • 14.1.1, 14.1.2, 14.1.3, 14.2, 14.3.1, 14.3.2, 14.5–14.7 • 15.
Schläpfer, Kurt, Prof. Dr. Eidgenössische Materialprüfungs- und Forschungsanstalt (EMPA), (Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Testing), St. Gallen, Switzerland 3.2.3, 3.2.10.
Liebetruth, Hartmann, Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Kommunikationstechnologie-Druck, Bergische Universität-Gesamthochschule Wuppertal, (Department of Communication Technology – Print Media, University of Wuppertal), Wuppertal 13.1.2. Nestler, Rainer, Prof. Dr.-Ing. FB Druck, Verpackung, Kommunikationstechnik, Hochschule für Druck und Medien, Fachhochschule Stuttgart, (Department for Print, Pack, Media, University of Applied Sciences of Stuttgart), Stuttgart 1.8 • 7.1–7.3. Neumann, Richard, Dipl.-Ing. Lengerich 1.6.2.3 • 2.2.3, 2.3. Nicolay, Klaus-Peter, Dipl.-Ing. Arcus Communications & Design, Bruttig-Fankel 3.2.1, 3.2.4, 3.2.5, 3.2.7, 3.2.8, 3.2.11, 3.2.12.
Schönhut, Jürgen, Dr. phil. Fraunhofer-Institut für Grafische Datenverarbeitung (IGD), (Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics), Darmstadt 1.1.1, 1.1.2, 1.1.3, 1.2.2–1.2.4, 1.2.5, 1.2.6 • 8.2 • 11.1, 11.2–11.5, 11.6, 11.7. Seydel, Michael, Dr.-Ing. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 4.2, 4.3. Tessmann, Uwe, Dr.-Ing. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 13.1.3 (without 13.1.3.5). Thomas, Hermann, Dipl.-Ing. Darmstadt 2.5.1–2.5.3. Walenski, Wolfgang Bergisch-Gladbach 1.5 (without 1.5.2.8).
Rech, Helmut, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Institut für Technologie & Planung Druck, Hochschule der Künste, (The Berlin University of Arts), Berlin 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.7 • 2.1.1. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Helmut Kipphan Born 1943 in Heidelberg (Germany). Apprenticeship as a toolmaker and employed in Manufacturing and Design at Schnellpressenfabrik AG Heidelberg (1957-1963). Studied mechanical engineering at the University of Applied Sciences in Mannheim and then at the University of Karlsruhe. 1971 Scientific Assistant at the Institute for Measurement and Automation Control Engineering with Machine Laboratory of the University of Karlsruhe. In 1975 doctoral thesis on Correlation Measurement Techniques and Identification Processes for Industrial Applications. In 1979 post-doctoral thesis and »habilitation« in Measurement Technique and Systems, teaching as lecturer at the University of Karlsruhe, in 1985 appointed professor. 1978 employment at Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG as research engineer. Projects in printing technology processes, automation, measurement and control techniques in printing
system engineering. Managerial and senior managerial positions in the fields of research and development, sheet-fed and web offset printing, technology transfer, patenting and education. Since 1992 responsible for Technology and Innovation Research, thus working in all areas of the graphic arts industry, particularly in the fields of advanced and new technologies for print media production. Intensive cooperation with customers, companies and institutes around the world, regarding new technologies, product improvements, further and new developments. Involvement and management positions on committees for industrial joint research in mechanical engineering and the graphic arts industry within national and international associations and organizations. Since 1998 cooperation with a team of authors from the fields of science, research, education and training, academia and industry and an international team of translators to create and publish both a German and an English edition of the Handbook of Print Media. Responsible as project manager, scientific director, main author and editor, representing Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG in cooperation with Springer.
XIII
Table of Contents
1
Fundamentals
1.1 1.1.1 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2 1.1.1.3 1.1.1.4 1.1.1.5 1.1.2 1.1.3 1.1.4 1.1.5 1.1.5.1
Communication Technologies . . . . . . . . . . Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Newspapers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brochures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Other Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Distribution and Market Volume . . . . . . . . . Trends and Scenarios for the Future . . . . . . . Changes in the Traditional Printing Sector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Integration of New Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 8 10
Production of Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . Layout, Typography, Graphic Design . . . . . . Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Typography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Graphic Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Postpress/Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Production Equipment in the Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Premedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14 15 15 19 23 24 29 33
Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Overview of Printing Technologies . . . . . . . Printing Technologies with a Printing Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress/Flexographic Printing . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lithography/Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Technologies without a Master (NIP Technologies) . . . . . . . . . . . . Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Systems based on Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
40 40
1.1.5.2 1.2 1.2.1 1.2.1.1 1.2.1.2 1.2.1.3 1.2.2 1.2.3 1.2.4 1.2.5 1.2.6 1.3 1.3.1 1.3.2 1.3.2.1 1.3.2.2 1.3.2.3 1.3.2.4 1.3.3 1.3.3.1 1.3.3.2 1.3.3.3
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
10 11
35 38
41 45 48 52 55 58 60 63 65
1.4 1.4.1 1.4.2 1.4.3 1.4.4
Print Quality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color/Color Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Image Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Halftone Process/Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quality Control/Measurement Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.1 Color Measurement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.2 Color Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.3 Measurement of Gloss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.5 Surface Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.5.1 Characteristics of Surface Finishing . . . . . . . 1.4.5.2 Surface Finishing Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5 1.5.1 1.5.2 1.5.2.1 1.5.2.2 1.5.2.3 1.5.2.4 1.5.2.5 1.5.2.6 1.5.2.7 1.5.2.8
68 68 79 90 99 100 108 110 111 111 113 117 117 130 130 137 137 139 139 139 140
1.5.3
Print Media Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Substrates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structure and Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offset Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Flexographic Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pad Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inks for Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varnishes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.6 1.6.1 1.6.2 1.6.2.1 1.6.2.2 1.6.2.3
Printing Presses and Printing Systems . . . . General Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Designs for Multicolor Printing . . . . . . . . . . Sheet-fed Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Web-fed Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Packaging Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
145 145 150 150 154 159
1.7 1.7.1 1.7.1.1 1.7.1.2 1.7.1.3 1.7.2 1.7.2.1 1.7.2.2 1.7.2.3 1.7.3
Drying Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Physical Drying (Absorption) . . . . . . . . . . . . Infrared (IR) Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Evaporative Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Problems in Practical Operation . . . . . . . . . Chemical Drying/Curing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oxidation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UV Drying/Curing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electron Beam Drying/Curing (EBC) . . . . . Auxiliary Drying Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . .
166 166 169 170 172 173 173 173 175 176
140 142
XIV
Table of Contents
1.7.3.1 1.7.3.2 1.7.4
Powder Spraying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Silicone Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Measuring Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
176 176 176
1.8
Products of Print Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . .
180
1.9
Aspects of Management and Business Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185 1.9.1 Production Options and Business Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185 1.9.1.1 The Value-added Chain (Production Depth and Product Range) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186 1.9.1.2 Financing and Distribution Models . . . . . . . 188 1.9.1.3 Media Business as a Technical Service . . . . . 190 1.9.2 Coordination of Workflows . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190 1.9.2.1 Lean Production and Lean Management . . . 190 1.9.2.2 Tracking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192 1.9.2.3 Quality Assurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195 1.9.3 Production Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197 1.9.3.1 Material Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197 1.9.3.2 Capacity Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199 1.9.3.3 Personnel Deployment and Supply of Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
2
Printing Technologies with Permanent Printing Master
2.1 2.1.1 2.1.1.1 2.1.1.2
Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Basic Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Plates, Printing Ink, Dampening Solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inking Unit, Dampening Unit, Printing Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Print Quality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sheet-fed Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Paper Travel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Feeders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sheet Reversal/Perfecting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Delivery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Print Enhancement and In-line Finishing . . Press Architecture (Special Designs) . . . . . . Web-fed Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Press and System Concepts (Components) . . Web Travel (Infeed and Further Processing) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Folders and Print Product Variations . . . . . . Newspaper Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Remote Control, Measurement and Control Technology/Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . Press Remote Control Systems . . . . . . . . . . . Color Measurement and Control Systems . . Register Measurement and Control . . . . . . . Inspection of the Printed Image . . . . . . . . . .
2.1.1.3 2.1.1.4 2.1.2 2.1.2.1 2.1.2.2 2.1.2.3 2.1.2.4 2.1.2.5 2.1.2.6 2.1.2.7 2.1.2.8 2.1.3 2.1.3.1 2.1.3.2 2.1.3.3 2.1.3.4 2.1.3.5 2.1.4 2.1.4.1 2.1.4.2 2.1.4.3 2.1.4.4
206 206 206 209 213 223 226 226 229 237 244 247 251 254 257 260 260 276 281 286 292 297 298 300 307 308
2.1.4.5
In-line Print Quality Measurement and Control Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.4.6 The State of the Art in Remote Control, Measurement and Control Systems . . . . . . . 2.1.5 Automation in Print Media Production . . . . 2.1.5.1 Wash-up Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.5.2 Plate Changing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.5.3 Sheet Size and Paper Travel Adjustment . . . 2.1.5.4 Ink Feed Presetting in the Printing Unit . . . 2.1.5.5 Ink and Dampening Solution Supply . . . . . . 2.1.5.6 Makeready for Print Production . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.6 Examples of Offset Printing Presses and Production Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.6.1 Sheet-fed Offset Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . 2.1.6.2 Web-fed Offset Printing Presses/Systems . . . 2.1.7 Potential for Further Development . . . . . . . 2.1.7.1 Print Quality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.7.2 Offset Printing Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.7.3 Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.7.4 Automation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2 2.2.1 2.2.1.1 2.2.1.2 2.2.1.3 2.2.1.4 2.2.1.5 2.2.1.6 2.2.1.7 2.2.1.8 2.2.1.9 2.2.1.10 2.2.2 2.2.3 2.2.4 2.3 2.3.1 2.3.2
Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Cylinder Manufacture . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Cylinder Imaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Storage and Changing of Gravure Cylinders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Impression Roller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inking Unit and Doctor Blade . . . . . . . . . . . Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Circumferential and Lateral Register . . . . . . Magazine Turner Bars Superstructure . . . . . Gravure Printing Folders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reel Stand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Examples of Gravure Printing Systems . . . . Gravure Printing in the Packaging Industry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Potential for Further Development . . . . . . .
312 317 319 320 321 323 325 328 329 333 333 338 354 354 355 356 357 360 360 360 363 366 368 369 372 372 374 374 377 377 384 391
2.3.4
Letterpress Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395 Basic Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395 Letterpress Printing (Process and Applications) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 396 Flexography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397 Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397 Printing Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 401 Examples of Flexographic Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 404 Potential for Further Development . . . . . . . 407
2.4 2.4.1 2.4.1.1 2.4.1.2 2.4.2 2.4.2.1 2.4.2.2
Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 409 Basic Principles/Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 409 Platemaking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410 Printing Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414 Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 416 Screen Printing on Flat Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . 416 Screen Printing on Curved Surfaces . . . . . . . 417
2.3.3 2.3.3.1 2.3.3.2 2.3.3.3
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2.4.3 2.4.3.1
Examples of Machinery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Equipment and Machinery for Flat-bed Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.3.2 Screen Printing Machinery for Printing on Curved Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.3.3 Rotary Screen Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.4 Potential for Further Development . . . . . . . Special Printing Technologies and Product Specific Applications . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.1 Security Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.1.1 Bank Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.1.2 Postage Stamps, Stamps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.1.3 Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.2 Business Forms Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.3 Label Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.4 Pad Transfer Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.4.1 Printing Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.4.2 Cliche Making . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.4.3 Pad, Ink, Object Holding Device . . . . . . . . . 2.5.4.4 Multicolor Pad Transfer Printing, Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
417 417 418 418 422
2.5
3
Prepress
3.1 3.1.1 3.1.1.1 3.1.1.2 3.1.1.3 3.1.1.4 3.1.2
Conventional Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Word Processing, Typesetting . . . . . . . . . . . . Typesetting Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Manuscript . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Text Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Word Processing and Typesetting . . . . . . . . . Text Output for the Production of Film/Plate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Designs of Output Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Requirements on Films . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Photomechanical Image Processing/ Reproduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Use and Importance of Analog Reproduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Principles, Tasks of Photomechanical Reproduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Machines and Devices used in Reproduction Technology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production of Film Copies for Single-Color Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production of Film Copies for Multicolor Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electronic Reproduction Technology (Repro Scanner) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Assembly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page Make-up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sheet Assembly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Proofs/Test Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Platemaking and Quality Control . . . . . . . . General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.1.2.1 3.1.2.2 3.1.3 3.1.3.1 3.1.3.2 3.1.3.3 3.1.3.4 3.1.3.5 3.1.3.6 3.1.4 3.1.5 3.1.5.1 3.1.5.2 3.1.6 3.1.7 3.1.7.1 3.1.7.2
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423 423 423 429 432 433 438 442 443 445 447 447
452 453 453 454 454 456 458 458 460 461 462 464 469 469 474 479 482 485 485 487 490 493 493 494
3.1.7.3 3.1.7.4 3.1.7.5 3.1.8 3.1.8.1 3.1.8.2 3.2 3.2.1 3.2.1.1 3.2.1.2 3.2.1.3 3.2.2 3.2.2.1 3.2.2.2 3.2.2.3 3.2.2.4 3.2.2.5 3.2.2.6 3.2.3 3.2.3.1 3.2.3.2 3.2.3.3 3.2.3.4 3.2.3.5 3.2.4 3.2.4.1 3.2.4.2 3.2.4.3 3.2.4.4 3.2.5 3.2.5.1 3.2.5.2 3.2.5.3 3.2.5.4 3.2.6 3.2.7 3.2.8 3.2.8.1 3.2.8.2 3.2.9 3.2.10 3.2.10.1 3.2.10.2 3.2.10.3 3.2.10.4 3.2.10.5 3.2.10.6 3.2.10.7 3.2.10.8 3.2.11
Letterpress Printing, Flexography . . . . . . . . . 497 Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 498 Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 498 Color Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 499 Processes for the Correction of Tone Values and Color Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500 Offset-Gravure Conversion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 501 Digital Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structure of Digital Printed Products . . . . . . Technological Capabilities and Workflows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Description of the Printed Page . . . . Digital Screening Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quality Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Input and Output Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . Transferable Tonal Range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dot Shape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tone Value Influences in Printing . . . . . . . . . Color Management Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . Image-dependent Effects and Corrections . . Digital Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Origins of Digital Photography . . . . . . . . . . Image Scanning with Digital Cameras . . . . . Demands on the Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special Features of Digital Cameras . . . . . . . Digital Photography and Color Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digitizing Originals (Scanner) . . . . . . . . . . . Scanner Designs and Models . . . . . . . . . . . . Drum Scanners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Flat-bed Scanners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digitizing and Redigitizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sheet Assembly and Imposition . . . . . . . . . . Page Make-up and Sheet Assembly . . . . . . . Full-Sheet Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Imposition through Software . . . . . . . . . . . Imposition Workflows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Raster Image Processor (RIP) . . . . . . . . . . . . Storage Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Network Concepts and Components . . . . . . Working with Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Data Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Image Reproduction Process using Color Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production of Color Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structure of Color Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Connection of Color Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . Rendering Intent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Management and the Production of Proofs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Management for Images on the Internet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Management and Standardization . . . Digital Proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
503 503 503 505 508 513 514 516 517 518 519 519 520 520 521 523 524 525 525 526 529 529 531 532 533 533 534 537 540 545 547 547 549 550 555 555 555 557 558 560 561 562 562 562
XV
XVI
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3.2.11.1 3.2.11.2 3.2.11.3 3.2.11.4 3.2.11.5 3.2.12 3.2.12.1 3.2.12.2 3.2.12.3
Digital Proofing Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Soft Proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hard Proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Management Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . Preflight Check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Film Production and Platemaking . . . . . . . . Computer to Film Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer to Plate Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer to Film and Computer to Plate in the Prepress Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
563 563 563 566 570 570 570 573
4.4.2.1 Concepts for Re-imageable Masters with Material Application/Ablation . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4.2.2 Re-imageable Printing Plate Systems without Material Application . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.5 4.5.1 4.5.2
573 4.5.3
4
Computer to … Technologies
4.1 4.1.1 4.1.2 4.1.3
Survey of the Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer to Film . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer to Plate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer to Press (Direct Imaging and Computer to Print) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Use of Computer to ... Technologies and Networking for the Production of Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.1.4
4.2 4.2.1 4.2.2
Computer to Film . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Principles and Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Film Material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.5.4 581 583 583 584 588 593 593 594
4.3 4.3.1 4.3.2
Computer to Plate/to Cylinder/to Screen . . 597 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 597 Technology of Computer to Plate Systems for Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 598 4.3.2.1 Design Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 598 4.3.2.2 Imaging Methods and Plate Punching . . . . . 601 4.3.2.3 Computer to Plate Systems for Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 604 4.3.3 Computer to Plate for Flexographic Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 608 4.3.4 Computer to Cylinder for Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611 4.3.5 Computer to Screen for Screen Printing . . . 611 4.3.6 Computer to Plate Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . 612 4.3.7 Rise in Quality as a Result of Computer to Plate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 614 4.3.8 Productivity and Economic Efficiency . . . . . 615 4.3.9 Printing Plates for Digital Imaging . . . . . . . . 616 4.3.10 Trends in Computer to Plate . . . . . . . . . . . . 623 4.4 4.4.1
Computer to Press/Direct Imaging . . . . . . . Computer to Press/Direct Imaging with Removal of the Master for each Print Job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4.1.1 Computer to Press/Direct Imaging Printing Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.4.1.2 Expansion and Comparison of Systems . . . . 4.4.2 Computer to Press/Direct Imaging Printing Systems with Re-imageable Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Printing Technologies without a Printing Plate (NIP Technologies)
5.1 5.1.1 5.1.2
Principles and Basic Components . . . . . . . . Computer to Press/to Print Technology . . . . Non-Impact Printing Technologies (Overview) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Process and Functional Components in NIP Technologies . . . . . . . . Digitally Controlled Image Creation in NIP Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . System Concepts/Architecture of Computer to Print Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inks for Non-Impact Printing Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Components for Computer to Print Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5.1.4 5.1.5 5.1.6 5.1.7 5.2 5.2.1 5.2.2 5.2.3 5.2.4 5.2.5 5.3 5.3.1 5.3.2 5.3.3
652
Computer to Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 657 Printing Systems based on Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 658 Printing Systems based on Ionography, Magnetography, and Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . 664 Design Principles of Computer to Print Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 665 Digital Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 672
5
5.1.3
643
677 677 678 679 679 681 685 687
Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 689 Principle of Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . 689 Imaging Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 691 Inking Unit (Developing Unit) and Toner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 692 Fixing and Cleaning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 696 Conception of the Printing Unit . . . . . . . . . 698 Ionography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Imaging System and the Principle of Ionography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Unit Concepts and Printing Systems based on Ionography . . . . . . . . . . . .
701 701 702 703
627 628
5.4 5.4.1 5.4.2 5.4.3
Magnetography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 706 Principle of Magnetography . . . . . . . . . . . . . 706 Imaging System for Magnetography . . . . . . . 708 Examples of Applications/Printing Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 709
5.5 5.5.1
Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Overview of Ink Jet Technologies and Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
628 638 641
711 711
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5.5.2 5.5.3 5.5.4 5.5.5
Continuous Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drop on Demand Ink Jet Technologies . . . . Structure of Ink Jet Arrays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Systems based on Ink Jet Technology for Multicolor Printing (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
714 715 723
731
5.6.2 5.6.3
Thermography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Overview of Thermography Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thermal Transfer Printing Systems . . . . . . . Thermal Sublimation Printing Systems . . . .
731 734 738
5.7
Electrography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
742
5.8
Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
746
5.9 5.9.1 5.9.2 5.9.3 5.9.4
“X”-Graphy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TonerJet Printing Technology . . . . . . . . . . . . Elcography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Direct Imaging Printing Technology . . . . . . Assessment of New Types of NIP Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
749 750 752 754
5.6 5.6.1
725
756
6
Hybrid Printing Systems
6.1
Overview of Printing Methods and Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
761
Combination Variants of Hybrid Printing Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
763
6.2 6.3 6.3.1 6.3.2 6.3.3 6.3.4 6.3.5
6.4
System Concepts and Examples of Implementations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hybrid Printing Systems combining Conventional Printing Technologies . . . . . . Hybrid Printing Systems combining NIP Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hybrid Printing Systems combining Conventional and NIP Technologies . . . . . . Hybrid Printing Systems combining Computer to Press/Direct Imaging with NIP Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hybrid Printing Systems combining Conventional Printing Technologies with Computer to Press Technologies . . . . . Hybrid Techniques for In-line and Off-line Print Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7
Print Finishing Processes
7.1
Classification of Print Finishing Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.2
Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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765 765 765 766 768 769 771
7.2.1 7.2.1.1 7.2.1.2 7.2.1.3 7.2.1.4 7.2.2 7.2.2.1 7.2.2.2 7.2.2.3 7.2.3 7.2.3.1 7.2.3.2 7.2.4 7.2.4.1 7.2.4.2 7.2.4.3 7.2.5 7.2.5.1 7.2.5.2 7.2.5.3 7.2.5.4 7.2.5.5 7.2.6 7.2.6.1 7.2.6.2 7.2.7 7.2.7.1 7.2.7.2 7.2.8 7.2.8.1 7.2.8.2 7.2.9 7.2.9.1 7.2.9.2 7.2.10 7.2.10.1 7.2.10.2 7.3 7.3.1 7.3.1.1 7.3.1.2 7.3.1.3 7.3.2 7.3.2.1 7.3.2.2
775
7.3.2.3 7.3.2.4 7.3.2.5
782
7.3.2.6 7.3.2.7
Cutting and Die-Cutting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 782 Characterization of the Processes . . . . . . . . . 782 Cutting with Guillotine Cutters . . . . . . . . . . 782 Cutting Webs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 789 Die-Cutting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 791 Folding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 796 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 796 Folding with Folding Machines . . . . . . . . . . 796 Folding Bookbinding Sheets . . . . . . . . . . . . . 806 Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 811 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 811 Forwarding Process in Industrial Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 812 Assembling into Blocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 816 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 816 Gathering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 816 Gathering into Single-layer Blocks . . . . . . . . 821 Binding Blocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 825 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 825 Thread-Stitching Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 826 Perfect Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 830 Thread-Sealing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837 Wire-Stitching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 839 Trimming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 842 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 842 Trimming Book Blocks and Brochures . . . . 842 Edge Treatments on Books and Brochures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 844 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 844 Process Sections of Block Edge Treatments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 845 Case Making . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 848 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 848 Producing Book Covers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 850 Book Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 853 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 853 The Process Sections of Book Finishing . . . . 855 Packaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 857 Characterization of the Process . . . . . . . . . . 857 Packaging of Books and Brochures . . . . . . . 858 Process Structuring in Print Finishing . . . . Basic Principles of Process Structuring . . . . Production Flow in Print Finishing . . . . . . . Interlinking Modules in Print Finishing . . . Temporary Storage of Folded Sheets . . . . . . Production Lines in Print Finishing (Examples) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cutting Lines for Labels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production Lines for Mailings and Folded Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Newspaper Mailroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mailroom for Magazines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Binding Lines for Multi-layer Brochures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production Lines for Hardcovers . . . . . . . . . Finishing Short Print Runs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
862 862 862 863 867 870 870 873 876 882 886 887 891
XVII
XVIII
Table of Contents
7.3.2.8 Bag Production Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.3.2.9 Folding Boxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8 8.1 8.1.1 8.1.1.1 8.1.1.2 8.1.1.3 8.1.1.4 8.1.1.5 8.1.2 8.1.2.1 8.1.2.2 8.1.2.3 8.1.3
Material and Data Flow in Print Media Production Material Logistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 905 Logistics around the Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 905 Supply of Printing Plates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 906 Paper Reel Logistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 908 Ink, Dampening Solution, and Air Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 910 Waste Disposal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 911 Paper Pile Logistics for Sheet-fed Offset Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 911 Logistics in Printing Companies . . . . . . . . . . 914 Procurement Logistics in Printing Companies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 915 Inventory Management in Printing Companies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 917 Production Logistics in Printing Companies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 918 Logistics in Publishing Houses . . . . . . . . . . 920
8.2 8.2.1 8.2.2 8.2.2.1 8.2.2.2
Networking and Data Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . Network Concepts and Interfaces . . . . . . . . . Digital Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Workflow in Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Workflow and Digital Printing (Computer to Press) . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.2.3 Digital Workflow: Advantages, Challenges, and Possibilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.3 CIP3 for the Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM) of Printed Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.4 Production Management/Monitoring Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.4.1 Purpose, Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.4.2 Production Monitoring Systems . . . . . . . . . .
9
894 897
923 924 926 926 928 929 930 934 934 935
Production Strategies for Print Media
9.1 9.1.1
Production Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 939 Strategic Orientation of Printing Companies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 939 9.1.2 Centralized and Distributed Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 941 9.1.2.1 Centralized Production at One Site . . . . . . . 941 9.1.2.2 Distributed Production at Several Sites . . . . 943 9.1.2.3 Integrated Production, Interlinking of Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 944 9.1.3 Print on Demand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 945 9.1.4 Personalization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 948 9.2
Production Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
952
10
Comparison of Printing and Production Technologies for Print Media
10.1
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
963
10.2
Overview of Methods and Technologies for the Production of Print Media . . . . . . . .
965
10.3
Production Methods and Strategies . . . . . . 969
10.4
Criteria for the Selection of Printing Technologies and Production Methods . . . .
973
10.5.1 10.5.2 10.5.3 10.5.4
Performance Criteria of Printing Systems and Trends in Print Media Production . . . . Quality and Productivity/Run Length . . . . . Productivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production Costs per Printed Page . . . . . . . . Trends in Print Media Production . . . . . . . .
975 975 976 976 978
11
Electronic Media and Multimedia
11.1
Media Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.5
983
11.2
Data Types, Data Structures and their Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 985 11.2.1 Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 985 11.2.2 Graphics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 986 11.2.3 Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 986 11.2.4 Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 989 11.2.5 Video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 989 11.2.6 Animation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 989 11.2.7 Virtual Reality (VR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 989 11.2.8 Augmented Reality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 990 11.2.9 Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 991 11.2.10 Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 991 11.3 11.3.1 11.3.2 11.3.3 11.3.4
Data Carriers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 993 Hard Disk Storage Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 993 Rewritable, Removable Storage Units . . . . . . 993 CD-ROM and DVD-ROM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 993 Magnetic Tapes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 994
11.4 11.4.1 11.4.2 11.4.3
Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 995 Internet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 995 Intranet, Extranet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 996 Broad Band Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 996
11.5 11.5.1 11.5.2
Data Compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998 Compressed Data Archives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998 Compression Processes for Image Data Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998 Compression Processes for Audio . . . . . . . . 999 Compression Processes for Video . . . . . . . . . 999
11.5.3 11.5.4
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Table of Contents
11.6 11.6.1 11.6.2 11.6.3 11.6.4
Output Devices for Electronic Media and Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Projection Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stereo Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Projection Directly to the Eyes . . . . . . . . . . .
1001 1001 1002 1002 1003
13.2 13.2.1 13.2.1.1 13.2.1.2 13.2.1.3
11.7
Multimedia Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1004 13.2.1.4
12
Print Media and Electronic Media
13.2.1.5
12.1
Examples of Print Media and Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1007
13.2.1.6
12.2 12.3 12.3.1 12.3.2
The Production of Print Media and Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1010 “Electronic” Books, “Electronic” Ink, “Electronic” Paper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1013 “Electronic” Books (E-Books) . . . . . . . . . . . 1013 “Electronic” Ink (E-Ink), “Electronic” Paper (E-Paper) . . . . . . . . . . . . 1015
12.4
Market Shares and Trends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1020
13
Special Topics
13.1 13.1.1
History, Education, Research . . . . . . . . . . . . History of Technology (Press and Prepress) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offset Printing and Offset Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing and Gravure Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress Printing and Letterpress Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Historical Relationship of the Printing Press Manufacturers . . . . . . . . . . . . Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Education and Qualifications (Career Profiles, Courses) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Printing Industry as an Employer . . . . . Educational Requirements and Options . . . Vocational Training . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Course of Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Scholarships for International Study Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Heidelberg Print Media Academy . . . . . . . . . Science and Research (selected Examples) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Subjects, Methods, and Cooperations . . . . . Inking Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sheet Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Industrial Joint Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13.1.1.1 13.1.1.2 13.1.1.3 13.1.1.4 13.1.1.5 13.1.2 13.1.2.1 13.1.2.2 13.1.2.3 13.1.2.4 13.1.2.5 13.1.2.6 13.1.3 13.1.3.1 13.1.3.2 13.1.3.3 13.1.3.4 13.1.3.5
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13.2.1.7 13.2.1.8 13.2.2 13.2.2.1 13.2.2.2 13.2.2.3 13.2.2.4 13.2.2.5 13.2.2.6 13.2.2.7 13.2.3
1029 1029 1029 1032 1034 1041 1043 1048 1048 1049 1050 1052
13.3
Environment, Safety, Standardization . . . . . Environmental Protection in the Printing Industry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environmental Protection in Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environmental Protection in Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environmental Protection in Letterpress and Flexographic Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environmental Protection in Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environment-oriented Business Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Legal Foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Support and Advice for Environmentrelevant Measures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Safety Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Health and Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . International and European Directives (Laws) and Standards . . . . . . . . . Safety-conscious Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Requirements for Separating Protective Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hazard Analysis, Risk Assessment . . . . . . . . CE and GS Marks of Conformity . . . . . . . . . Intended Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Industry Standards, Codes of Practice and National/International Standards . . . . .
1076 1076 1076 1078 1079 1080 1080 1080 1081 1083 1084 1084 1085 1086 1089 1091 1091 1093 1093
13.3.1 13.3.2 13.3.3 13.3.4 13.3.5 13.3.6 13.3.7
Markets and Development Trends for Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Newspaper Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazine Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Book Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Catalog Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Advertising Printing Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . Packaging Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SOHO Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14
Appendix
14.1 14.1.1 14.1.2
Explanation of Specific Terms . . . . . . . . . . . 1115 Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1115 Abbreviations and their Meaning (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1125 Abbreviations for Source References Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1128
1056 1057
14.1.3
1059 1059 1060 1063 1067 1070
14.2 14.2.1 14.2.2
1102 1102 1105 1106 1107 1107 1108 1108
Physical/Technical Quantities and Conversions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1130 Quantities and Units in the SI-System (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1130 Conversion between the SI-System and the Imperial System (Metric/Imperial) . . . . . . . 1133
XIX
XX
Table of Contents
14.3 14.3.1 14.3.2
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1134 List of References to Readings on the Chapters and Sections in this Handbook . . . 1134 Selected Literature on Print Media related Topics (General Bibliography and Individual Topics) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
14.5 14.5.1 14.5.2 14.5.3
14.4 14.4.1 14.4.2 14.4.3 14.4.4 14.4.5 14.4.6 14.4.7 14.4.8 14.4.9
Standards (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Substrates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Materials (Printing Plates, Blankets) . . . . . . Printing Technologies and Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quality, Quality Specifications, and Measurement Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Safety of Machinery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Environmental Management . . . . . . . . . . . .
1137 1137 1138 1139 1140 1140 1141 1141 1143 1143
14.6 14.6.1 14.6.2
Research Associations and Educational Institutions for the Graphic Arts Industry (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Universities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Research Institutes and Research Centers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Institutions for Teaching/Training and Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1145 1145 1147 1150
Associations and Organizations in the Printing and Publishing Industry (Selection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1153 Associations and Organizations . . . . . . . . . . 1153 Industrial Joint Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1166
14.7
International Conferences for the Graphic Arts Industry (Selection) . . . . . . . . 1168
15
Subject Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1173
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V
Preface
The German edition of the Handbook of Print Media – Technologies and Production Methods was published and introduced to the market during the book fair in Frankfurt/Main in October 2000. The translation work for the English edition was started in 1999 immediately after the manuscripts for the German edition had been prepared. The translation of the German preface follows this preface. The German preface describes in detail the origins of this handbook, the goals regarding contents and readership, and in particular the comprehensive cooperation with experts from academia and industry in the fields of science, research, development, education and from publishing and the communication industry worldwide. I have expressed my recognition and gratitude to the many experts and partners in this cooperation and would like to do so again here. The translation for the English edition was done by a team of international translators, headed by Dr. René Bosewitz (The Translators AG, Heidelberg, Germany). The proof-reading and refinement, especially regarding specialist terminology and the optimization of the description of the technical content, was supported from the beginning by Professor Frank Romano and Professor Frank Cost of the RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology)/College of Imaging Arts & Science in Rochester/NY (USA) and myself. In my capacity as editor, author within the large group of authors,and project manager I was responsible for the content of the handbook and its scientific and technical quality. I was deeply involved in the process of enhancing the translation and learned a lot with the translators when explaining the technical facts,answering questions and showing what had to be described. This handbook is, therefore, not “only” a translation of the German edition. It includes many improvements, additional information and descriptions in text, © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
pictures and graphs for enhancing the educational and technological presentation. The handbook is written in “international” English. The rules for syllable separation and punctuation are based mainly on “Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary”, and “The Chicago Manual of Style”. The typographical details, the fonts and page layout are optimized for easy reading. I would like to thank the whole team working on the translation, especially the afore-mentioned experts for their patience, efforts and support in creating a valuable international handbook, which is now ready for worldwide use. The units for technical specification/quantities are stated in the international SI-system (metric) and only a few quantities are stated additionally in imperial units directly in the text. Detailed tables of physical/technical quantities and conversions are given in Section 14.2. We took special care to choose terminology which is used and understandable worldwide and exploited this consistently throughout the whole book (sometimes giving additional terms). This was a great challenge and the reader should excuse us if some terms are different from those he is familiar with. The bibliography (references and further reading) in the several sections/chapters is basically identical to that of the German edition. There is, however, some additional information from international publications to support the English speaking readership. In any case where an English edition exists we added this in or replaced the German edition with this. Most of the addresses, for example of research institutes and associations, are stated in their native language. We have not given a translation for these. If official names exist in English, in some cases we have substituted them for the German or added them in.
VI
Preface
Together with best regards and wishes from Bernhard Schreier (Dipl.-Ing.), the Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG to all readers, partners and experts from the printing, publishing and communications industry, I hope and trust both personally and on behalf of Heidelberg that readers will gain an equal amount of pleasure and profit from this book, the Handbook of Print Media. It should contribute to ensuring the continuing economic, high-quality production and availability of print media in today’s age of information – both in conjunction as well as in competition with electronic
media. The handbook should also help to ensure that the influence of innovations, advanced and new technologies, market and customer demands on these industries and their further growth be evolutionary rather than revolutionary, and that print media continue to contribute to the maintenance, expansion and further development of a high degree of education, culture, progress and quality of life throughout the world. Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Heidelberg, December 2000
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
VII
Preface of the German Edition
The technological change and evolution in the printing, publishing and communications industry and increasing market requirements in terms of quality, costs and distribution of print media, have led to a considerable change in the technologies and processes used for their production. Digitalization, automation, synergistic technologies and innovations are further signs of improvements, developments and new production methods and processes. Demand on print media is also influenced by the spread of electronic media together with new possibilities in information storage and availability, production and design of print media and the creation of new multimedia products, in particular as well as the workflow stages involved in media production. Processes and equipment used to produce print media require the use of a wide range of innovative technologies and components from all areas of technology and industry – the need for cross-functional, interdisciplinary working is particularly strong in the graphic arts industry and therefore involves cooperating with partners from many industrial sectors. It is the advances in computer and networking technology, digital control and processing of production equipment within the total production chain in print media creation – that is from concept to the final print media product – which more than anything else have enabled the traditional production areas of prepress, press and postpress to evolve together and be realized for practical use. Digital workflow has become a reality, Computer to ... technologies characterize production with their wide range of possibilities for realizing digital print production. Novel printing technologies, production methods and strategies have become possible and are being used in practice. Digitalization has also created the premedia sector in which information for distribution is created as a digital master that forms the basis for duplication via both print media and electronic media. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
In order to produce and supply media products and services, companies, management and technical personnel, trainees, teachers and instructors must adapt equally to existing and continually developing new structures, technologies and opportunities in today’s information society. Investment decisions must be made from a commercial, technical, market and customer-specific point of view, based on a wide range of business and technical performance factors and criteria. Information and knowledge on this meteoric development and new possibilities have been published in numerous books and papers in technical literature and presented and discussed at national and international symposia and conferences, but mostly only describing specific subjects. However, it is difficult for the individual to keep up-to-date and form a comprehensive picture based on traditional technologies and processes. In this respect the far reaching content and didactic design of the Handbook of Print Media should make it an essential aid and tool in everyday practice. The original ideas for producing a handbook of print media are based on my conversations in June 1996 with Dr. Hubertus v. Riedesel (Dipl.-Phys.) of the Springer Publishing Company in Heidelberg during one of the symposia of the “Rhein-Neckar – discussion group for Physical Research in Industry and University” (an initiative of the University of Heidelberg and the industry). Conversations between the management of the publishing house, and Hartmut Mehdorn (Dipl.-Ing.), Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG at that time, and myself provided the impetus for putting these ideas into practice. Fascination with the wide range of subject matter and products of the graphic arts industry and the experience of two successful globally active enterprises based in the same city of Heidelberg led to the unanimous decision by the Board of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG in December 1997 to publish the “Handbook of Print Me-
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dia – Technologies and Production Methods” in German in the year 2000 and an English edition soon after. It was, in particular, Hartmut Mehdorn, who undertook to meet the urgent need for further education and training in the printing and publishing industry and supported the project through his creative and extremely active involvement. The following events lend particular significance to the year 2000 for the graphic arts industry and Heidelberg: the 600th birthday of Johannes Gutenberg, the inventor of letterpress printing using movable metallic type, the required tools and a printing press; the 150th anniversary of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG and, linked to this, the inauguration of the Print Media Academy based in Heidelberg. With the Print Media Academy as a new center for communication, qualifications and knowledge within a worldwide network for the whole printing and publishing industry, and the Handbook of Print Media, Heidelberg continues to contribute to the improvement and dissemination of knowledge about the requirements of industry and promote the advancement of the graphic arts and communications industry. An examination of the current literature showed that a large number of good text books and much educational literature is already available, covering most subjects and areas of the printing and publishing industry as well as a large quantity of individual publications, but also that there is considerable demand for an up-to-date, clear and comprehensive presentation of the whole subject. Thus, the concept of the handbook took shape, whose main focus was the need to give state-of-the-art treatment to the whole spectrum of modern print media production and to make clear, topical facts available, explaining subjects, such as the following in particular: • traditional technologies and new innovative processes in all stages of production; • detailed treatment of novel digital printing technologies, especially non-impact printing processes; • the positioning of print media, electronic media and multimedia; • the positioning of the various printing processes based on their performance characteristics and the market segments of print media; • presentation of the trends in the production of print media, taking economic and technological requirements into account;
• training, education, research, development trends and strategies; • state-of-the-art production equipment, systems and technologies, taking account of the products of numerous well known manufacturers from around the world; • environmental protection and safety technology; • historical evolution of printing; • reviews of standards, norms, training centers and research establishments, societies, associations and organizations of the printing and publishing industry, as well as international technical conferences, etc. The handbook should therefore serve as a standard reference for technical communication and further education; it should provide technical personnel and managers of printing and publishing houses, of the graphic arts and communications industry, supply industry, scientific bodies, trade associations and experts in research and education, trainees and students with comprehensive information. In addition, however, it should give those who are not familiar with the industry the opportunity to learn about the theory and practice of print media production and to develop an awareness of new areas. The wide scope of the handbook means that there has been a deliberate use of repetition in the individual chapters. This enables the reader to first become familiar with the broad area of a subject and then use crossreferencing to study the complementary information given in other chapters. The handbook provides a solid foundation for acquiring basic information and gaining an understanding and knowledge of the subjects’ interrelationships. References to specialist and complementary literature help to provide more in-depth information. It represents a building block and reference work for training programs and further education – also in the context of the programs of the Print Media Academy – and is aimed at an international readership having a broad range of different interests. The CD-ROM that accompanies the handbook makes it a true multimedia product. The CD-ROM includes the complete handbook, enables a full text search and contains additional aids to provide a convenient and focused method of searching and information gathering. It also provides a user friendly guide to the extensive text and the numerous figures. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Preface
There is an up-to-date explanation of the state-of-theart with respect to subject matter, referring in general to the end of 1999. However, many new products and technologies, which were not to be publicized until May 2000 at Drupa (the world’s largest exhibition of print media) have already been taken into account. Statements on the trends and forecasts are based on current facts and extensive experience as well as information obtained around the world. The editor and publisher have agreed to update the handbook in subsequent editions, so that it forms a standard work for the production of print media. It is with pleasure that I undertook the extremely stimulating tasks which Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG entrusted to me as leader of the project to create the handbook, as well as taking charge of the technical content, and acting as the editor. This afforded me a particular opportunity and responsibility for creating and making the subject matter available while Springer, in close cooperation, undertook the production and marketing. The diverse subject matter as well as Heidelberg’s aim to represent technologies, products and systems as independent of their manufacturer as possible led from the outset to the idea of creating the handbook by employing a team of authors drawn from science, research, education, academia and industry. This was coupled with the skill, knowledge, competence and experience of the Heidelberg Group, but predominantly with external authors. One of the greatest challenges was to set up the team of authors, to discuss and agree on the subject matter and content, to match the authors to the current tasks and to complement the team during the editing process. The initial meeting of a core team of authors took place in Heidelberg in March 1998. Additional authors were still being included in the team until August 1999. A great deal of thanks is due to all authors. They performed their tasks well and were willing to agree to suggestions and improvements so that the handbook could appear to come “from a single mold” despite the large number of authors. Thanks also go to the many experts, who are not named here but whose words and deeds contributed to the content and progress of the project. Professor Arved C. Hübler (Dr.-Ing.) and Professor Wolfgang Beier (Dr.-Ing.) of the Institute for Printing and Media Technology at the Technical University of © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Chemnitz supported the coordination of the technical matter. In closest collaboration with the editor they contributed to ensuring that the manuscripts met the quality demanded of the handbook in terms of content and educational value, and that the contributions were as consistent as possible. The English translation of the handbook was begun immediately following production of the German manuscript. The English translation team was supported by international experts with experience in the graphic arts industry, Professor Frank Cost and Professor Frank Romano of the RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology)/College of Imaging Arts & Sciences in Rochester/NY (USA). They undertook the task of performing a general check of the translations produced regarding the language and then once again for content, resulting in a number of improvements. This also meant that the experience and interests of international experts, teachers and readers could be taken into account to an even greater extent. Special thanks are also due to the employees in my department of Technology & Innovation Research, Dr. Martin Schmitt-Lewen (Dipl.-Phys.) and Walter d’Heureuse (Dipl.-Ing.), who continually supported me during the whole project through their critical and constructive contributions on the clarification of technical questions, but also for their patience and understanding in the often difficult situations caused by scheduling. Special mention goes to their support in working on the manuscripts for proof-reading and correction as well as searching for and acquiring material for illustrations. Thanks also to SciTech Consultants GmbH/Heidelberg, Germany, who worked in close cooperation with us from the beginning of the project regarding communication and timing between the various parties for both the German and English edition. The work included the competent and accurate proof-reading of all the versions of the chapters right up to going to print. I am particularly keen to thank all of the companies, experts and customers all over the world for the many conversations, the advice, suggestions and constructive criticism on the wide range of subjects and queries on the production of print media and the demands on the means of production. It was only with this information and support, mainly based on years of close cooperation and continual personal contacts, that we could take an up-to-date and comprehensive view of the
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interests and requirements of the users of production equipment and systems as well as their customers. This applies both to the gathering of the material for the book and the handling and treatment of the individual topics. This ensured that the handbook relates to industrial practice, lends equal support to owners, managers and employees in the various workplaces of a printing/publishing company and also offers trainees and students useful, practice-oriented information, knowledge, skill and experience. Many thanks also for the support received from colleagues and experts in the Heidelberg Group worldwide as well as the numerous contacts in companies in the supply industry, partners in cooperation and competitors, as well as experts and partners in institutions and organizations for industrial and academic research.
time and to make it available to a broad readership. It was always a common goal for me, Heidelberg and Springer to produce the very highest quality. Readers and users of the handbook are urged to provide suggestions and advice on how it may be updated and improved. This information will help in the preparation of a subsequent edition broadly based on a desire for continuous improvement.
The selection and creation of illustrations posed a particular challenge and represented a subject of special interest to me personally, firstly with respect to the quality of the images and secondly from the point of view of a representative selection of examples of products from as many suppliers as possible. Special thanks to all companies and experts whose understanding and helpfulness provided us with illustrations and information either directly or indirectly. Great care has been taken to name all sources; if there are omissions, please accept our apologies.
Personally and on behalf of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG and together with the best regards and wishes of the Chairman of the Management Board of Heidelberg, Bernhard Schreier (Dipl.-Ing.) to all readers, partners and experts in the printing, publishing and communications industry, I hope and trust that readers will gain an equal amount of pleasure and profit from this book, the Handbook of Print Media. It should help in allowing print media to continue to be produced and supplied economically and in high quality in today’s age of information – both in conjunction as well as in competition with electronic media. It should also mean that the influence of innovations, advanced technologies and market and customer demands on these industries and their further development will be evolutionary rather than revolutionary and that print media will continue to contribute to the maintenance, expansion and further growth of a high degree of education, culture, progress and quality of life throughout the world.
The skills, competencies, abilities, experiences and partners of the Heidelberg Group and Springer were used to produce a high-quality handbook in terms of content, illustration and design in a relatively short
Helmut Kipphan Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG Heidelberg, April 2000
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1 Fundamentals
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Contents Chapter 1
Fundamentals 1.1 1.1.1 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2 1.1.1.3 1.1.1.4 1.1.1.5 1.1.2 1.1.3 1.1.4 1.1.5 1.1.5.1 1.1.5.2 1.2 1.2.1 1.2.1.1 1.2.1.2 1.2.1.3 1.2.2 1.2.3 1.2.4 1.2.5 1.2.6 1.3 1.3.1 1.3.2 1.3.2.1 1.3.2.2 1.3.2.3 1.3.2.4 1.3.3 1.3.3.1 1.3.3.2 1.3.3.3
Communication Technologies . . . . . . . . . . Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Newspapers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brochures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Other Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Distribution and Market Volume . . . . . . . . . Trends and Scenarios for the Future . . . . . . . Changes in the Traditional Printing Sector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Integration of New Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 8 10
Production of Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . Layout, Typography, Graphic Design . . . . . . Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Typography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Graphic Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Postpress/Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Production Equipment in the Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Premedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14 15 15 19 23 24 29 33
Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Overview of Printing Technologies . . . . . . . Printing Technologies with a Printing Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress/Flexographic Printing . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lithography/Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Technologies without a Master (NIP Technologies) . . . . . . . . . . . . Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Systems based on Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
40 40
10 11
35 38
41 45 48 52 55 58 60 63 65
1.4 1.4.1 1.4.2 1.4.3 1.4.4
Print Quality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color/Color Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Image Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Halftone Process/Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quality Control/Measurement Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.1 Color Measurement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.2 Color Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.4.3 Measurement of Gloss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.5 Surface Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.5.1 Characteristics of Surface Finishing . . . . . . . 1.4.5.2 Surface Finishing Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5 1.5.1 1.5.2 1.5.2.1 1.5.2.2 1.5.2.3 1.5.2.4 1.5.2.5 1.5.2.6 1.5.2.7 1.5.2.8
68 68 79 90 99 100 108 110 111 111 113 117 117 130 130 137 137 139 139 139 140
1.5.3
Print Media Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Substrates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structure and Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offset Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Flexographic Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pad Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inks for Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varnishes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.6 1.6.1 1.6.2 1.6.2.1 1.6.2.2 1.6.2.3
Printing Presses and Printing Systems . . . . General Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Designs for Multicolor Printing . . . . . . . . . . Sheet-fed Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Web-fed Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Packaging Printing Presses . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
145 145 150 150 154 159
1.7 1.7.1 1.7.1.1 1.7.1.2 1.7.1.3 1.7.2 1.7.2.1 1.7.2.2
Drying Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Physical Drying (Absorption) . . . . . . . . . . . . Infrared (IR) Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Evaporative Drying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Problems in Practical Operation . . . . . . . . . Chemical Drying/Curing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oxidation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UV Drying/Curing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
166 166 169 170 172 173 173 173
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1.7.2.3 1.7.3 1.7.3.1 1.7.3.2 1.7.4
Electron Beam Drying/Curing (EBC) . . . . . Auxiliary Drying Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . Powder Spraying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Silicone Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Measuring Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
175 176 176 176 176
1.8
Products of Print Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . .
180
1.9
Aspects of Management and Business Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production Options and Business Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Value-added Chain (Production Depth and Product Range) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.9.1 1.9.1.1
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185 185 186
1.9.1.2 1.9.1.3 1.9.2 1.9.2.1 1.9.2.2 1.9.2.3 1.9.3 1.9.3.1 1.9.3.2 1.9.3.3
Financing and Distribution Models . . . . . . . 188 Media Business as a Technical Service . . . . . 190 Coordination of Workflows . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190 Lean Production and Lean Management . . . 190 Tracking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192 Quality Assurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195 Production Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197 Material Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197 Capacity Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199 Personnel Deployment and Supply of Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
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1.1 Communication Technologies
1.1.1 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2 1.1.1.3 1.1.1.4 1.1.1.5 1.1.2
1.1.1
Print Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Newspapers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brochures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Other Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4 5 5 6 6 6 6
1.1.3 1.1.4 1.1.5 1.1.5.1 1.1.5.2
Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Distribution and Market Volume . . . . . . . . Trends and Scenarios for the Future . . . . . . . Changes in the Traditional Printing Sector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Integration of New Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Print Media
Topical surveys on the significance and use of print media prove that the need for print media is growing worldwide. This is indicated by the fact that at the end of the millenium Time Magazine acknowledged the sociocultural significance of the invention and utilization of book printing and elected Johannes Gutenberg’s work as the most crucial event of the millennium. It is true that the age of electronic media has started; however printed information is and remains omnipresent. Depending on level of education, income, and household type, between US$ 20 and US$ 55 per month and household were spent in Germany in 1997 on books, brochures, magazines, and newspapers. The market for print products offers more variety than ever before. Usually, printed products are categorized into commercial printing and periodicals. This classification differentiates printed matter with regard to its frequency of publication. Since the production process also depends largely on these basic conditions, printshops usually specialize in one or the other market segment. Commercial printing refers to print products that are produced occasionally (e.g., catalogs, brochures, leaflets, business cards, etc.). Periodicals are printed matter that appears periodically (e.g., newspapers, journals, magazines). Publishing houses and companies are the typical clients for periodicals printing. The variety of print media is illustrated in figures 1.1-1 and 1.1-2. Another way of categorizing printed
Fig. 1.1-1 Variety of print media: magazines, brochures, posters, books, etc.
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1.1 Communication Technologies
Fig. 1.1-2 Packaging: bags, folded boxes
products is by splitting them into special product groups. These individual groups are described briefly in the following. 1.1.1.1 Books Gutenberg’s work and his invention, printing with movable lead type, in the middle of the fifteenth century triggered a revolution in book production. A much greater proportion of the population had the chance to acquire education, culture, and information than had ever been possible with hand-written books. Consequently, illiteracy decreased in the following centuries. Books continued to be colored by hand even after Gutenberg’s invention, so that very colorful volumes of high quality comparable to earlier ones were still produced. For over 500 years letterpress was the dominant printing technology for books. Only when phototypesetting and lithographic printing became widespread in the 1970s did the printed book turn into a low cost © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
mass medium. It was not only more efficient production processes but also the availability of inexpensive paper that were decisive reasons for the breakthrough of books as mass media. The printed book developed its independent appearance over time. The form of the type used moved away from imitated script types to its own type forms. The number of new book titles produced has grown continually since Gutenberg’s invention. Even today, in the age of electronic media, annual growth rates in book production are still recorded. With close to eighty thousand titles produced annually, Germany is one of the biggest markets for books in the world today. Only China and Great Britain produced more titles in 1997 (cf. fig. 13.3-8). In 1998 more than 500 million books worth over 3.5 billion Euros were produced in Germany. The extensive range of books is classified on the one hand in terms of content; on the other, it extends from high-quality, thread-stitched leather volumes with a gilt edge to simple perfect-bound pocket books/ paperbacks. Books are offered both in one color (book printing) as well as in top-quality multicolor art publications. The range of books available today in Germany has risen to over 770000 titles. The same applies to other printed products such as magazines, periodicals, newspapers, and brochures. 1.1.1.2 Magazines The range of magazines consists mainly of periodicals, including trade magazines, journals, and illustrated magazines. Trade magazines cover a limited field, thus attracting a limited specialist readership. Unlike books, production costs for magazines are not paid for exclusively by the final consumer. Often more than half of the costs are financed by advertising. Magazines are usually published by publishing houses just like books. Unlike books, magazines usually have a shorter lifespan. This is due to the content and it is a major characteristic of the periodical. Since magazines have a limited length of use and differ from books greatly in terms of content, their external form also differs from that of books. Magazine production differs considerably from book production. Magazines are generally multicolored booklets with a flexible cover. They often have a high circulation and are bound using simple binding processes (e.g., wire-stitching, perfect binding). Depending on the circulation, magazines are printed with sheet-fed offset or web offset presses, but
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1 Fundamentals
rotogravure presses are also used for magazines with a very high circulation. 1.1.1.3 Newspapers The newspaper is still one of the most significant mass media today. The first newspapers appeared at the start of the seventeenth century. Pamphlets in the sixteenth century were the precursor of the newspaper. Most newspapers are produced daily and have a high circulation. Some daily papers even appear a few times per day, to ensure that their content is very up-to-date. The two most important categories of newspapers are daily papers (dailies) and weekly papers. The external appearance of newspapers differs considerably from that of magazines. Newspapers normally consist of large-size loose sheets. Several of these loose sheets are combined during production and form an individual section of the paper. A newspaper consists of several sections/parts with varying content called “newspaper books.” Generally, newspapers are produced on special newspaper printing presses. These presses are highly productive web presses, which can print on uncoated paper, at low cost. The traditional newspaper used to be black and white. Modern printing presses are able to print in color economically. This has created the opportunity to adapt the newspaper’s appearance to today’s expectations (color photographs, color TV), but also to conform to the wish of many advertising customers that their advertisements be published in color. The production of a newspaper is mainly financed by advertising inserts and advertisements. For this reason the ultimate consumer price for a newspaper is relatively low. 1.1.1.4 Brochures Along with advertising inserts, which we come across every day in newspapers and magazines, there is a large market for leaflets and product descriptions. Such printed matter is referred to as brochures. Unlike magazines and newspapers, they are not published periodically. Brochures are commercial print work. Another significant difference from newspapers or magazines is the usually low print volume of brochures. Today, brochures are generally printed in color and are available either as folded individual sheets or bound copies. They are of better quality than newspapers. Brochures are mainly used to describe something particular (e.g., company, product). Brochures
are mostly used for advertising; therefore production costs are normally borne by the advertiser and not by the reader. 1.1.1.5 Other Printed Media Packaging represents another important group of printed products. It can be made of very different materials such as paper, cardboard, plastic, metal, glass, and so on. In the first place, packaging is used to protect the actual goods inside, but it also makes for an attractive presentation. At the same time packaging is also printed on to provide information about the package content. All the major printing technologies are used for printing packaging – often in a combination of several technologies.
1.1.2
Electronic Media
Electronic media were developed in the twentieth century and together with printed products (print media) became important for communicating information. This trend continues today and is characterized particularly by the use of computers and the Internet. In addition to the latest developments in the Internet and World Wide Web, electronic media also include the more conventional radio and television along with the corresponding forms of storage such as video and audio recordings on CD-ROM and DVD-ROM as well as animations. Electronic media, as is the case with print media, also involve a chain of creation and transmission which depends on the specific form of the media. As a rule, the first stage in this process consists in generating the contents, for instance, for recordings onto audio or video tape. In some cases, information is converted from one medium to another, such as from conventional film to video. In the case of web pages though, content can also be computer-generated, thus allowing for the use of content from both the real and the virtual worlds. Animations may describe scenes and “tracking shots”; in the end, running an animation results in a chronological sequence of pixel images, that is, almost a video flow. The description of an animation can be considerably more compact and efficient than the transmission of the video sequence. Therefore, the actual animation may only be executed on a final output device such as a powerful presentation computer. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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In the preliminary phase, scripts are usually compiled (at least in a professional environment) as we know them from traditional film. In the case of electronic media products, the specific demands on the presentation must already be taken into account in the design stage. The reasons for this include the low local resolution (in comparison to print products) and the restriction of the output format (e.g., the size of the monitors or even windows within the overall monitor display). Distribution may be in a saved form on data media (CD-ROM, video tape/audio tape, and storage medium for sound) or be live, for instance, for transmission of a concert or sports event. In both cases, an attempt is made to restrict the volume of data because of the limited capacity of the storage media or because of the limited bandwidth of communication channels. Compression techniques play an important role here. They permit the reduction of data without a noticeable loss of quality. The underlying transmission technologies may be varied, ranging from Internet connections via dedicated switched connections, such as satellite routes, or high-speed links via cable or glass fiber, to private or company networks, also with various technology (company television, Intranets). The presentation systems, for instance, computer monitors, television screens, projector devices, audio reproduction systems (loudspeakers, headphones) are generally at the end of the transmission chain. Before these systems can respond though, codings and compression processes might have to be reversed with corresponding components (software and hardware) to represent the transmitted data. In the place of presentation systems, memory can also be found there that records the data transmitted, for instance, to reproduce it at another time. The use and dissemination of electronic media can be regulated with protection rights which are, however, relatively easily infringed; this applies particularly to digital data where the copy is just as good as the original. Modern procedures deal with protective mechanisms against unauthorized copying both in the • cryptography field, that is, encoding data to prevent unauthorized use as well as • in the digital watermarking field, that is, importing information into the digital data stream which is not visible to the normal observer, but which can © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
be detected in order to determine the location at which the data was made available. In a broader sense, electronic media also include in particular interactive applications: media which appear differently depending on user intervention. These include computer games, interactive simulations, or virtual reality applications. This leads directly on to multimedia concepts which are described in the following section. Please refer to chapter 11 for more details.
1.1.3
Multimedia
The term “multimedia” is closely connected with today’s computers and output devices such as monitors, loudspeakers, and printers and their capacity for reproducing various types of information (text, images, sound, animation, etc.). Multimedia systems do not just output these different types of information; these systems make it possible to simultaneously create multimedia information and interact with other multimedia documents (data files on data storage units, such as a server and CD-ROM). Although the term “multimedia” is relatively new, what lies behind it is not (see also sec. 11.7). Multimedia means nothing more than making use of several types of information (text, images, graphics, animation, video and audio sequences) in one publication. As illustrated in figure 1.1-3, this also includes print media (e.g., CD-ROM in a book). Human communication is multimedial as humans transmit information, for instance in a conversation, by talking and gesticulating simultaneously. The technical application of using several media simultaneously to reproduce content is not new either. Thus, for example, television can simultaneously transmit information using text, image, and sound. The addressing of several sensory organs combined with the advantages of using individual media has synergetic effects making the multimedia product an attractive option. The success of the multimedia concept becomes clear with television and the so-called “new electronic media” such as the Internet or CD-ROM publications. CD-ROM publications are not multimedia documents as such. A CD-ROM is merely a medium on which various types of information (such as text, sound, video, etc.) can be stored. Only if, for example, text, sound, and animation are combined on a CD-ROM, could one speak of a multimedia CD-ROM. Types of information
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Multimedia Electronic Media
Distribution
Internet, etc. CD-ROM, etc.
Electronic information
Data Management
Printed Product
Digital Printing System Originals, Data
Prepress
Printing (conventional)/ Press
Finishing/ Postpress
Customer/User
Idea Content Layout
Equipment to make data visible
TV, Radio
Production
Premedia Sources of Information
8
Distribution
Multimedia Print Media
Fig. 1.1-3 Structure for producing electronic media, print media, and multimedia documents
(text, sound, image, video) must not be confused with medium (data carrier, e.g., paper, CD-ROM, disk, etc.). The same applies to Internet publications; here too, different types of information have to be linked with one another before you have a multimedia presentation. Hypertext as an additional type of information is in itself not a multimedia document; only when hyperlinks point to multimedial contents does a hypertext become a multimedial hyperlink document. The play-back devices (computer, television, etc.) for electronically stored information are not even close to addressing all the sensory organs of a human being. Today’s multimedia products are not yet able to invoke the senses of smell and touch. A medium which can be used to pass on a fragrance to consumers, or to call on the sense of touch by certain surface properties in addition to transmitting text and visual information is, for example, paper. One might therefore say that paper is a multimedial product. However, printed information lacks dynamism and interaction. With play-back devices for electronically stored information there is also a potential for appealing to the senses of touch and smell in the future (e.g., transmission of vibrations/oscillations and temperature via operating elements).
1.1.4
Distribution and Market Volume
The printing industry is a sector consisting predominantly of small and medium-sized companies. Around 90% of all printing companies worldwide employ less than twenty people (fig. 1.1-4). The growth of the printing industry is influenced essentially by macroeconomic factors such as economic development and consumer demand. Worldwide, the printing industry contributes 1–12% to the gross added value of the processing industry. In the industrial countries the production volume of the printing industry has a share of 0.5–4% in the gross domestic product (GDP). In emerging markets this share may even amount to 20% of the gross domestic product. In the USA the printing industry is the sixth largest industrial sector and has therefore a clear economic significance for the country. In 2000 the 430000 printing companies worldwide will achieve a turnover in the range of 430–460 billion US dollars. Figure 1.1-5 shows the distribution of this volume according to individual product segments. The areas of advertising and commercial printing as well as packaging and label printing make up the most im© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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Fig. 1.1-4 Segmentation of printing companies by number of employees (in %) (Heidelberg estimates on the basis of worldwide sources of information)
Central Europe
79
North America
82
Middle and South America
89
Eastern Europe
65
Asia/Pacific
95
< 20
Commercial/ Advertising printing 46%
Packaging/Labels 18%
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Magazines 9%
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15 332
20 – 50
> 50
Eastern Europe Central and South America 2% Africa 3% 2%
North America 33%
Asia/Pacific 36%
Books 7%
9
Newspapers 16% Catalogs 4%
Central Europe 24%
Fig. 1.1-5 Distribution of worldwide market volume by individual products (not including the SOHO/“Small Office, Home Office” market) (Heidelberg estimates on the basis of worldwide sources of information)
Fig. 1.1-6 Distribution of market volume by individual regions (Heidelberg estimates on the basis of worldwide sources of information)
portant product segments with current sales of 129–138 billion US dollars. Catalogs are the least important in terms of sales. Figure 1.1-6 shows the segmentation according to region. It can be seen from the diagram that 93% of volume is concentrated in the regions of North America and Central Europe, as well as Asia/Pacific. Within these regions the most important markets are the USA, Germany, Great Britain, and Japan, which alone account for 50%.
North America has the greatest per capita consumption of print products per year. This is six times greater than the worldwide average consumption of 58 US dollars (fig. 1.1-7). An analysis of individual countries shows a more differentiated picture. Japan has the highest per capita consumption at 480 US dollars while the USA, at 342 US dollars, is closely followed by Singapore at 320 US dollars. The greatest future growth is expected to be in China, South East Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe.
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US-$ 400 350
334
300
247
250 200 150 100
58
47
50
31
15
5
Eastern Europe
Africa
0 North America
Central Europe
Asia/Pacific
Central and World average South America
Fig. 1.1-7 Per capita consumption of print products per year in US dollars (Heidelberg estimates on the basis of worldwide sources of information, status: 1998)
1.1.5
Trends and Scenarios for the Future
The worldwide growth in gross domestic product up to the year 2002 is estimated to be 3.4% p.a. In comparison the volume of print products is predicted to rise by 2.5–3% that is, there is a potential market of 452–488 billion US dollars by the year 2002. As far as printed matter world-wide is concerned, packaging and label printing shows strong growth while the other product segments such as advertising and commercial printing, newspapers, catalogues, magazines, and books show a moderate increase (fig. 1.1-5). There is an enormous variation in growth between individual regions or countries. Hence the greatest future growth rates are expected in China and other emerging markets, whereas the highly developed economies will show only slight increases. The printing industry as a whole has generally been undergoing enormous structural and technological change for several years. Apart from the changes affecting the traditional printing sector, the integration of new media (e.g., CD-ROMs, online services) into existing product offers represents the greatest challenge to the graphic arts industry in the years to come. 1.1.5.1 Changes in the Traditional Printing Sector The trend towards the “one-man press” as a result of increasing automation of all the steps in the process of a
printing house will create an enormous potential for innovation in the field of machinery and equipment but also in processing in the coming years. The best example of this is in the area of prepress, where technological developments mean that the average expected product life cycle of the equipment is only eighteen months. Printing processes are being increasingly controlled and adjusted electronically, which leads to consistent high quality and greater productivity. Digital workflow also means that productions are completed more rapidly. Hence more than half of the orders for commercial printers arrive in digital form. By the year 2002 this figure is expected to be over 65%. This is the only way of shortening delivery times for print products and meeting the high customer demand for quality. All printing companies are expected to offer greater flexibility in the processing of a large variety of substrates, inks, and methods of print finishing. This means that there is a visible trend for all print products to employ multicolor as well as decorative and special colors. In addition, run lengths are getting shorter since experts believe that the greatest chance of growth lies in the market for small, color work with a fast turnaround time. The information and communication sector is expected to provide a positive impulse for the whole printing industry. Recently, electronic publishing has revolutionized the world of prepress. The use of com© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.1 Communication Technologies
puter to film, computer to plate and computer to press systems is already widespread and is undergoing continuous growth. In order to achieve a smooth flow of digital data from prepress via press to postpress, the integration, networking and digitalization of all processing steps is essential. Over forty leading manufacturers in the graphic arts industry are cooperating on an international scale to develop a standard for data flow through the so-called “CIP3 concept” (CIP3 international cooperation of prepress, press and postpress, see also sec. 8.2.3). Practical application and world-wide expansion are well on the way. 1.1.5.2 Integration of New Media Beside the classical areas of activity – the production of print media – other services are becoming more important. Hence the design of print media, the creation
2010
Technological change
1995 Electronic media 30% Print media 70%
Electronic media 50% Growth: approx. 9% p.a.
Growth: approx. 3% p.a.
Print media 50%
Fig. 1.1-8 Development trends in the market for print and electronic media (Status:1999; worldwide sources of information)
Fig. 1.1-9 Advertising expenditure for print media in individual regions [1.1-1]
of multimedia products (CD-ROMs, Internet sites, print media in combination with electronic media, etc.), consulting services, and individual training are being requested more and more by the printing and publishing industry. The increasing power of electronic media (especially CD-ROM, Internet) will increase competitive pressure on the print media and partially replace print products while at the same time creating new print jobs. Despite strong growth in electronic media (fig. 1.1-8), the market for print media remains large and attractive since a high proportion of the ever-growing advertising expenditure flows into print media, and the demand for print and electronic media especially worldwide is increasing. The trend towards increasing advertising expenditure in print media is shown in figure 1.1-9. North America and Europe show moderate growth with rates of 3.1% p.a., and 4.6% p.a. respectively. In Asia advertising expenditure in print media is rising by 6.1% p.a. The regions of greatest growth, admittedly starting from a low level, are Central and South America and the rest of the world with two-digit growth rates per year. As the Internet continues to grow, the sale of goods and services via data networks is increasingly regarded as a new method of generating sales by many businesses. The customer is able to choose from an almost unlimited range of goods 24 hours a day. All that is needed is a PC, which the customer uses to connect via modem to the net. Figure 1.1-10 shows the spread of computers online worldwide, while figure 1.1-11 shows the distribution of connections by country. In 1997 the Internet was used by around 90 million people. By the year 2005 it is projected that there will
70 000
North America
Mill. US-$
60 000 50 000
Europe
40 000
Asia/Pacific
30 000 20 000
Central and South America
10 000
Rest of the World
0 1996
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1998
1999
2000
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be more than 400 million users. According to a study by Active Media Research, New York, three thousand companies interviewed worldwide said that annual turnover for online shopping via the Internet had increased four-fold. By the year 2001 the turnover from trade on the Internet (electronic commerce) is expected to have reached a level of US dollars 220 billion [1.1-4], equivalent to about 1% of the volume of world trade. Eighty percent of this is made up of transactions between individual companies (business-to-business). Even large, globally active businesses are still making little use of the opportunities the Internet has to offer. There are large global differences as far as online connections but also use of the Internet are concerned. With the exception of the Scandinavian countries, Europe lags far behind developments in North America. At the turn of the millennium Internet users are creating great problems for advertising agencies.In about 80%
183.6
200 Number in mills
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146.8
150
115.7 88.9
100 50 0
1997
1998
1999
2000
of cases they are male, around thirty years old, educated, and have a passion for computers. Sixty percent of all users visit fewer than ten web sites per month. Hence it is impossible for advertising agencies to reach a particularly differentiated target group, in contrast to the possibility of targeted advertising messages in individual print media. Whether and at what rate the Internet is exploited depends to a considerable extent on the acceptance of the new technologies by a broad population base. In this respect, participants in a study were asked about their expected use of print media in by year 2001. Figure 1.1-12 shows the result of this survey. The majority of the population expect to be making at least as much and possibly even more use of print media. This positive correlation in the use of new and old media has been established by several studies (amongst others [1.1-5] and [1.1-6]). The combined use grows proportionally with the level of education (e.g., [1.1-7]). Hence, from the point of view of the user, there is no indication that by 2002 the Internet will cover substantial parts of the print markets. History has demonstrated that the “new media replace old media” theory did not hold true in the past [1.1-8]: • During the 1920s: Radio was to replace printing. • 1950s: Television was to replace printing. • 1980s: The computer was to replace printing.
Fig. 1.1-10 Number of computers networked worldwide [1.1-2] Strong decrease 3% Strong increase Decrease 14% 10%
Rest of the World 14% North America 49% Japan 10%
Increase 25% Europe 28% Fig. 1.1-11 Distribution of computers connected online by country [1.1-2]
No change 48% Fig. 1.1-12 Survey on the expected use of print media in 2001 [1.1-3] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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• 1990s: The Internet was to replace printing. The fact is that print is still a dominant medium and is continuing to grow. Besides the Internet, the CD-ROM also has an important part to play. These powerful data carriers, on which a wealth of product information, pictures, video sequences, etc. can be stored easily and cost-effectively, have already firmly established themselves as a part of everyday life. However, as soon as the necessary infrastructure is in place and covers a large geographic area, the Internet should reduce the popularity of the CD-ROM as a medium for data transfer. As a medium for storage, the CD-ROM will be replaced by more efficient media. We can very easily imagine so-called hybrid forms appearing – that is, combinations of various media such as magazine and CD-ROM, Internet and CDROM, or Internet and print. In other words: multimedia information transfer.
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
References in 1.1.5 [1.1-1] Bernard, J.; Harrad, K. et al.: Advertising expenditure forecast. Zenith Media, London (UK) 1998. [1.1-2] European Information Technology Observatory. European Information Technology Observatory (EITO) – European Economic Interest Grouping (EEIG), Frankfurt/Main 1998. [1.1-3] People, paper and the future of print (Human factors final report). Sorkin-Enenstein Research Service, Chicago (IL) 1996. Printing Industries of America (PIA) – exclusively for GAMIS members, Alexandria (VA) 1996. [1.1-4] Printers and the Internet. Graphic Arts Marketing Information Service (GAMIS), Alexandria (VA) 1998. [1.1-5] Robinson, J. P. R.; Godbey, G.: Time for life: The surprising ways Americans use their time. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park (PA), 1997. [1.1-6] The American Internet User Survey. FIND/SVP, New York (NY) 1997. [1.1-7] Network, screen and page – The future of reading in a digital age. Prepared by Interquest and the University of Virginia. The Electronic Document Systems Foundation, Torrance (CA) 1997. [1.1-8] Pesco, Ch. A.: Cap Venture. GAMIS, Marshfield (MA) 1998.
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1.2.1 1.2.1.1 1.2.1.2 1.2.1.3 1.2.2
Layout, Typography, Graphic Design . . . . . . Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Typography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Graphic Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prepress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15 15 19 23 24
1.2.3 1.2.4 1.2.5 1.2.6
As shown in figure 1.2-1, the production flow involved in the production of print media comprises the stages of prepress, the actual printing process (press) itself, and finishing (postpress). These individual production stages are connected by the flow of materials, such as printing plates between prepress and press and printed sheets between press and postpress. Interconnec-
Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Postpress/Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Production Equipment in the Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Premedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
29 33 35 38
tion between the production stages has become increasingly marked by the data flow. Information is exchanged both for the actual production of special printed products and for the organization of the business and the production cycles. Information and data are an essential requirement for the optimal and reliable functioning of individual production processes
Database
Customer, agency, publisher
Plate, etc.
Originals Prepress Data
Printed pages Printing process
Data Film, plate, etc.
Postpress/ Finishing Data
Paper, ink, etc.
Distributor Data
Material, etc.
Consumer, customer
Information sources
Printed product
Production flow Storage Consumables Supplier
Fig. 1.2-1 Production flow, material and data flow for print media production © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
and equipment, and for efficient, high-quality, and economic production. Figure 1.2-1 shows that the content, layout, and form of the printed product are based on information in the form of originals and also particularly on data. Figure 1.2-1 also depicts how the printed product is delivered via the distribution system to the end-user/consumer; here, too, organization and distribution benefit from the data technology. The production chain of prepress, press, and postpress is logistically interlinked through storage areas for the materials needed for the production as well as by storage areas for the semi-finished and end products of the printing job. The use of efficient production management and archive systems for data to link and support all the manufacturing stages in the creation of printed products is becoming increasingly the state of the art. The individual stages and areas involved in the production of printed matter are explained below. Full descriptions with numerous details will be found in later sections of the book. The quality of a printed product is ultimately determined by its content, effect, and benefit to the client/consumer. The visual quality is obviously affected by high-grade processes and procedures for producing the print media. However, it is to a large extent determined by the conception of the print medium in text, graphics, and pictures, the representational form of the contents, that is, by layout, typography, and graphic design. Before going into the actual production process – the economical and high quality duplication of information through printing tailored to the customers and the market – we will describe the rudiments of design.
1.2.1
sign has its own subtly different historical development, which can provide detailed insights into the whole of human development from a historical, technical, and aesthetic perspective. 1.2.1.1 Type Origin of Type Type first developed over the course of time as a magical feat on man’s journey out of the unknown. It was a pictographic system of type that probably grew out of the human craving for knowledge and communication. These pictographic symbols lacked accuracy and precision, they were ciphers in need of interpretation. As human understanding grew deeper and more refined, so too did the need to design and set down clearer, more universal and accessible codes. Pictographic system was followed by logograms, which were derived from the sound of the spoken word (fig. 1.2-2). Each word had its own symbol, and the more distinctive and developed a spoken language was, the greater the number of symbols it had. There were well developed writing systems in China, India, Egypt, Mesopotamia and some other countries. Around 3000 BC the Sumerians developed cuneiform script, a syllabic writing system made up of about six hundred characters. The next decisive step was the de-
Layout, Typography, Graphic Design
The development of type, typography, and graphic design is an important part of the history of culture as a whole. Although knowledge of other spheres of culture such as painting, music, and literature is much more widespread, it is the symbols constituting language that make communication and the dissemination of knowledge throughout the world possible. These three areas are inextricably linked: type is an essential element of typography and typography is (besides illustration and photography) an essential part of graphic design. Each of these means of communication and de© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 1.2-2 Minoan hieroglyphs (above), Minoan linear type (below)
Fig. 1.2-3 Alphabets (Phoenicia, Greece, Rome; sixth to third centuries BC)
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velopment of the consonant alphabet by the Phoenicians around 1400 BC. This alphabet consisted of twenty-two letters. It was derived as a simplified version of Egyptian hieroglyphs and Babylonian cuneiform script. The Phoenician alphabet (fig. 1.2-3) formed the basis of all European writing systems. Around 1000 BC the Greeks adopted Phoenician script and introduced the symbols a, e, i, o, and u. The Roman alphabet was based on this development by the Greeks. The Roman capital script “Capitalis monumentalis” was developed (fig. 1.2-4), the increasing use of which led to the formation of the first lower case type. These early centuries AD also saw the move away from scrolls to the form of books still in use today.
Fig. 1.2-4 Roman capitals “Capitalis monumentalis”; alphabet on the plinth of Trajan’s column in Rome (AD 113)
The Middle Ages (fourth to fifteenth centuries) was a time of extensive writing and design. The carriers of written characters and text were clay, stone, wood, silk, papyrus, and then parchment. In the 7th century paper from China reached the Middle East, and from there Spain and the rest of Europe. The invention of duplicable printing first in China (c. 870), then in Korea with movable metal type (c. 1403), and finally Gutenberg’s technical developments in letterpress printing (c. 1440) heralded a new era of communication, replacing the hitherto handwritten one-off texts which required rewriting in order to be passed on. While at first old types were simply molded in lead for the new technology, new typefaces soon developed which have retained their formal elegance and character as model typefaces to this day: important designs originate from Claude Garamond (1480–1561), Nicolas Jenson (1420–1480), and Aldus Manutius (1459–1515). Soon after Gutenberg’s invention two distinct technical concepts regarding typeface co-existed in parallel: the Roman types Antiqua and Cursive, and the broken types Fraktur, Gothic, and Schwabacher (fig. 1.2-5). From these basic forms, which were derived from the handwritten script, thousands of different typefaces were developed that had slight but important differences between them. Technical innovations as well as the quest for aesthetic improvements each led to yet more variants.
Fig. 1.2-5 Types. a Roman types: Antiqua and Cursive; b Broken types: Fraktur and Gothic
a) Roman typefaces: Antiqua
b) Broken typefaces: Fraktur
Cursive
Gothic © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
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Classification of Typefaces The classification of typefaces formulated in 1964 (DIN 16518) allows the technical differences of all typefaces to be grouped into eleven distinct styles (see also examples of type in fig. 1.2-6): 1. Venetian Renaissance-Antiqua (Venitian) 2. French Renaissance-Antiqua (Old Face) 3. Baroque-Antiqua (Transitional) 4. Classical-Antiqua (Modern Face) 5. Serif-pointed Linear Antiqua (Slab Serif) 6. Sans Serif Linear Antiqua 7. Roman Variants (Decorative and Display) 8. Script 9. Handwritten Antiqua (Handwriting) 10. Broken types 11. Foreign types (non-Latin, non-Roman). Even the latest typefaces may be technically understood and classified using these groups. At present there is a new amended DIN classification in preparation, the content of which is, however, still under discussion. The basic construction of letters with their corresponding descriptions is shown in figure 1.2-7. The construction of letters in digital form is explained in section 3.1.1.3 and figure 3.1-2.
Fig. 1.2-6 Classification of typefaces (examples from DIN 16518, engl. version available)
Fig. 1.2-7 Construction of letters and naming of elements
Design of Typefaces Despite the numerous alphabets in existence, surprising new typefaces continue to be invented whose form best fits the spirit of their age. Some of the most important designers of the past were Anton Janson
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© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
g h
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X-height Ascender Ascender X-height Descender Base line
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Cap line height Type height Leading Type spacing
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Serif Bowl Connection stroke Stem Ear Counter
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(1620–1687), William Caslon (1692–1766), John Baskerville (1708–1775), Giambattista Bodoni (1740–1813), and Justus Erich Walbaum (1768–1837). Important typeface designers of the twentieth century were Emil Rudolf Weiss (1875–1942) with Weiss Antiqua and Weiss Gothic, Rudolf Koch (1876–1934) with Wallau and Cable, Paul Renner (1878–1956) with Futura and Plaque, Eric Gill (1882–1940) with Gill and Perpetua, Georg Trump (1896–1985) with City and Delphin, Karlgeorg Hoefer (1914–2000) with Salto and Permanent, Hermann Zapf (b. 1918) with Palatino and Optima, and Günter Gerhard Lange (b. 1921) with Arena and Concorde. Among the typeface designers who create today’s significant and widely used alphabets are Hans Eduard Meier (b. 1922) with Syntax and Syndor, Ed Benguiat (b. 1927) with Souvenir and Barcelona, Adrian Frutiger (b. 1928) with Meridien and Frutiger, Matthew Carter (b. 1937) with Galliard and Bitstream Charter, and Gerard Unger (b. 1942) with Swift and Gulliver. In the immediate present the new designs of Hermann Zapf and Adrian Frutiger are receiving particular attention.With his Zapfino typeface (1998), Zapf developed a calli-
graphic typeface that has achieved surprising technical versatility in this group of typefaces (fig. 1.2-8) by drawing on the possibilities of computer technology. Frutiger’s typeface Univers (fig. 1.2-9) was developed during the years 1953 to 1957 and became a classic of the modern age. In 1997 it was revised within the Linotype Library as Linotype Univers with 59 type styles (up to then, there were 21 type styles), making it all the more versatile in use. Despite all the changes and advantages brought by technology compared to the Middle Ages, the design of typefaces is still a process which has lost nothing of the seriousness of the original way of thinking, of knowing what constitutes technical and aesthetic quality, and of the need to familiarize oneself with the essential elements of symbols for communication. Only few designers have so far succeeded in achieving the highest quality with their typefaces. Besides Western typefaces (see DIN 16 518 classification), there is an extremely large group of non-Latin, foreign types that have developed in their own way and have highly elaborate technical requirements: among others, there are Greek, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese, or Japanese types, which, with slight differences in typeface design, represent the languages of those regions and provide a diverse range of alphabets permitting typographic forms rich in detail (fig. 1.2-10).
Wie kann man bei der Wahl schwanken ob man sein Leben den Frauen oder den Büchern weihen soll! Kann man eine Frau, wenn sie ihre Launen hat, zuklappen und ins Regal stellen? Wanderte schon einmal ein Buch, ohne dich zu fragen, einfach aus deinem Zimmer weg in den Bücherschrank eines anderen? Hat je ein Buch, stand dir gerade die Lust zu einem anderen, wolltest du schlafen oder auch nichts tun, von dir verlangt, du solltest jetzt gerade lesen und ihm allein dich widmen? Werden die Suppen von Büchern versalzen? Können Bücher schmollen, Klaviere spielen? Einen Mangel freilich haben sie: sie können nicht küssen! Hans von Weber
Zapfino No. 1
Fig. 1.2-8 Zapfino of Hermann Zapf (1998); Zapf wrote this text in his notebook in 1944; the characters were the beginnings of Zapfino
Fig. 1.2-9 Univers of Adrian Frutiger; examples of the various type designs (around 1955) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
Chinese
• Point system (DTP-point) (mainly used nowadays) 1 pt = 1/72 Inch = 0.353 mm 12 pt = 1 Pica = 4.23 mm 6 Pica = 1 Inch • Point system (Pica system) 1 pt = 0.351 mm 12 pt = 1 Pica = 4.21 mm
Hebrew
Arabic
Cyrillic Fig. 1.2-10 Examples of non-Latin script
1.2.1.2 Typography Type in its various forms is a fundamental requirement of typography. To put it simply, typography is basically the design of printed text using and arranging typefaces to create continuous text on a printed page. The selection of available typefaces used to portray texts and textual content and the layout of words and texts on pages or other text carriers such as boards and signs is an area of design requiring many years of apprenticeship or study, followed by consistent practice for purposes of refinement, improvement, or change. All printing elements such as text or lines, but also the non-printing segments such as empty areas or spaces, have their own measuring system, the point system (fig. 1.2-11). It was developed in 1795 by Francois Ambroise Didot and his son Firmin. One point (pt) measures about 0.38 mm. One Cicero corresponds to 12 points or 4.5 mm. In Anglo-American countries the unit pica/point is used, which, at about 4.2 mm, is smaller than the Franco-German system. Choosing the individual design elements for the typographical job at hand is done by selecting from a system consisting of many interrelated parts. As with all design problems, there are no hard and fast rules for making this selection, but only approxima© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• Didot system in photosetting (Franco-German standard system), [lead type] 1 p = 0.375 mm [0.376 mm] 12 p = 1 c (Cicero) = 4.5 mm [4.51 mm] Fig. 1.2-11 Comparison of typographic and metric systems of measurement
tions gained from experience, which can vary over time and from different perspectives. The designer’s ability to interpret form is very important in choosing the font. The Linotype FontExplorer can be very helpful in this respect. This new typeface browser enables selection of the correct fonts according to many design criteria. It is apparent that the sensitive use of typeface determines the quality of the typography and that a fresh approach must be used for every job. After the choice of font comes the setting of the font sizes (fig. 1.2-12) for the various parts of the text, the setting of the type styles (e.g., light, regular, or semi-bold), and the inclination (e.g., normal or italic). The font color and style (e.g., upper case, lower case, mixed) must also be determined. Once these have been decided it is necessary to establish the text structure: how far apart the individual lines are, what degree of line spacing (leading) there will be, what column width should be set and which justification will be selected. There is a distinction between justified (fig. 1.2-13a), unjustified (fig. 1.2.-13b), and centrally justified. It is important to establish whether each of the text paragraphs is to have an indent. A few of the recommendations for good, legible typography indicate what the basic problems of design are: there should be a maximum of around 60 characters per line and around 40 lines per page. Lengthy texts should be set no smaller than 9 point and no larger than 11 point. The leading (line spacing minus size of type height) should be 2 point.
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Fig. 1.2-12 Example of type sizes in Palatino
The twentieth century saw the appearance of historically oriented shapes (figs. 1.2-14 and 1.2-15) and expressionist and pictorial styles. There were functional and elemental styles, as well as experimental fads such as psychedelic or punk typography (figs. 1.2-16 to 18). Typography used graphic and pictorial elements as typefaces or alternatively created pictures using lettering. However, the basic typographic styles for reading matter have not changed since Gutenberg’s time, but have been continually refined.
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Fig. 1.2-13 Layout. a Justified; b Unjustified
The technical requirements of lead type and the typesetting system created for it determined to a large extent the form typography was to take. As a rule right angle designs with horizontal lines were created. Various aesthetic ideas repeatedly gave rise not only to new typefaces but also novel typographical styles.
Layout and Typography of the Present Book The technical construction of the present book was established at the planning stage by making various mutually compatible decisions about the design. Taking this as an example the extracts show the best methods of designing a book to optimize its legibility and aesthetic impact. Typefaces Basic Typeface/Body Type: Springer Minion Plus Regular, 10/11.3 pt (type size/ line spacing); for marking (emphasis): Springer Minion Plus Italic, 10/11.3 pt. Headings: Linotype Univers Condensed Bold, in color (similar to Pantone 647c), © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
Fig. 1.2-16 Expressionist book jacket (Ernst Ludwig Kirchner 1924)
Fig. 1.2-14 Cover page of the trade journal Graphische Technik (July 1940)
Fig. 1.2-15 Cover page of price list done in Art Noveau (approx. 1900)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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Fig. 1.2-17 Event poster with functional elements for representing the content (Max Huber 1948)
Fig. 1.2-18 Psychedelic poster for a concert from the flower-power movement (Wes Wilson 1966)
First-Level (title): Second-Level: Third-Level: Fourth-Level:
Column Lines/Running Head: Linotype Univers Condensed Light, 9/9.5 pt, in color.
36/36 pt; 18/19 pt; 12/13 pt; 10/11.3 pt.
Headers (Headings without Order Numbers): First-Level: Linotype Univers Condensed Bold, 10/11.3 pt, black; Second-Level: Springer Minion Plus Bold, 10/11.3 pt. Numbering of Figures and Tables: Linotype Univers Condensed Bold, 9/9.5 pt, in color. Figure Inscriptions: Linotype Univers Condensed Light, 9/9.5 pt, black. Typeface for Captions: Linotype Univers Condensed Light, 9/9.5 pt, black.
Special Typefaces: Springer Symbol, Heidelberg Symbol. Page Layout The text is set justified on the base line grid in two columns; highlights are italicized; paragraphs start with a 3 mm indent in the first line. A bullet is used as the first-level numbering symbol; a dash (en rule) is used as the second-level numbering symbol. There is an empty line spacing before and after a list. The following paragraph is not indented. Besides pure typeface decisions all other aspects of the book were also determined: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
• the page format (193 mm ¥ 242 mm), • the type area with two columns (156 mm ¥ 200 mm), • the column width (76 mm). The figures are preferably single column, double column, or 1.5 column width; the frames are 100% colored and 0.4 pt thick (for figures without a background), all figures with a background (e.g., photographs) remain frameless; pictures are centered within the frame. Figure captions appear below the figure and are set justified; for 1.5 column width figures they are next to the figure and unjustified; the distance between the caption lines and the edge of the picture is 3 mm. The figure number stands on its own if the caption text is longer than one line, otherwise it is at the beginning of the line without a following period. The part-figure designations (a, b, c, etc.) are printed black and in bold. They are always placed on their own line. 1.2.1.3 Graphic Design For many centuries design was of a conservative nature and governed mostly by religious content. The demand for consumer goods that increasingly accompanied the expanding economic systems after the French and particularly the industrial revolutions led to an avalanche of printed matter. Up to the late nineteenth century, designs were mostly black and white, printed on paper, and relatively rare. In the twentieth century printed products such as posters, advertisements, prospectuses, magazines, and of course books, became important media and were widely distributed. This meant that information had to be continually designed to attract attention. This was achieved through long print runs, large formats, a striking amount of color, but also topical subjects. Photographs soon came to be used as well as illustrations. Design in the Twentieth Century The first high points of this new age were the great number of artistic-illustrative posters of surprising design produced by designers such as Henri de ToulouseLautrec, Jules Cheret, Eugène Grasset and A. A. Mucha (fig. 1.2-19). These designers were situated between the fine and applied arts, between the personal and general form. Informational subject matter also increased: the design of packaging, direction indicators, forms, charts, and corporate literature became tasks that no longer had to be solved with ardent artistic feeling but with clear conceptual designs. It was the American William Addison Dwiggins who in 1922 first used the professional title “Graphic De© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 1.2-19 Illustrative poster (Jules Cheret 1893)
signer” to describe more accurately the new type of designer, who was no longer to be an artist in the traditional sense. This title describes someone who has specialized in the design of visual communication and brings together the design tools of typography, illustration, photography, and printing with the aim of informing, teaching, or influencing. The term soon caught on. The development of graphic design was influenced from widely divergent directions. On the one hand there were the traditionalists, who created designs using traditional artists’ tools. On the other hand methods using new ideas of form and content arose, which made this new area of design an unmistakable part of twentieth century culture. The greatest contribution to this was the work of the “Bauhaus”, a design school in Germany (fig. 1.2-20). The teachings of this school, which was in existence from 1919 to 1933, were further developed in Switzerland (fig. 1.2-21). After
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Fig. 1.2-20 Magazine cover in elemental design (Jan Tschichold 1925)
1945, exemplary achievements from the USA transformed this European development into the varied and differentiated field which characterizes graphic design in the world today (fig. 1.2-22).
1.2.2
Fig. 1.2-21 Concert poster in the style of “Swiss typography” (Josef MüllerBrockmann 1960)
Prepress
Prepress includes all the steps which are carried out before the actual printing, the transferring of information onto paper or another substrate (fig. 1.2-23). Traditional prepress is divided into three areas: • composition, that is, recording text, formatting text, and pagination; • reproduction of pictures and graphics, and particularly color separations for multicolor printing; • assembly and platemaking, i.e., the assembly of text, picture, and graphic elements into complete pages, (page layout/make-up), from pages to print sheets,
Fig. 1.2-22 Advertisement for a magazine in contextual text-picture combination (Gene Federico 1953) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
Information Sources
Printed product Customer, Agency, Publisher
Plate, etc.
Originals
Printing Process
Prepress Data
Printed pages
Data
Postpress Data
Film, plate, etc.
Paper, ink, etc.
Distributor Data
Material, etc.
Consumer, Customer
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Production flow Storage Consumables Supplier
Fig. 1.2-23 Prepress in the production flow for the generation of printed products
and also the making of the printing plate as the vehicle of information in the printing press (fig.1.2-24). Chapter 3 gives a detailed description of both socalled conventional prepress (sec. 3.1) and digital prepress (sec. 3.2). Composition Technology For centuries composition technology was dominated by the pioneering invention of Gutenberg – the letterpress with movable type.This process remained practically unchanged from the fifteenth until the end of the nineteenth century. Letters molded from lead were assembled into words,lines,and blocks of text (manual typesetting). Composition only became mechanized towards the end of the nineteenth century in the wake of industrialization. In 1885 Ottmar Mergenthaler developed a line casting machine, which became known by its trade name “Linotype.”It made it possible to compose whole lines of matrices by means of a keyboard and to fill them with molten lead. This machine dominated composition until the 1960s – along with “Monotype”, which operated in a similar way but produced individual letters, and the still indispensable manual typesetting. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 1.2-24 Prepress with conventional film stripping and digital master preparation (text, images, graphics) with EDP systems
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As quicker and more effective printing technologies began to replace letterpress, particularly offset and gravure printing, the traditional lead composition was improved by innovations. Photocomposition began to be developed in the 1940s – at first, as an analog process, in which text was exposed letter by letter onto film through matrices. The breakthrough for photocomposition, and with it the decline of lead composition, first came at the beginning of the 1970s with digital photocomposition systems. This involved the transfer onto film of lines of text entered via a keyboard into the processor of a computer by means of cathode ray tubes and later by laser. Pictures and Graphics In the early days pictures and graphics were integrated in printed products in the form of woodcuts, and copper and steel engravings. Reproduction technology in the modern sense did not come in until the end of the nineteenth century as photographic procedures made it possible to capture pictures on film and to screen them, that is, to break them up into small dots. (Screening is necessary because with conventional printing technologies it is only possible to produce solid tints and not continuous tones. The continuous tone effect is simulated for the human eye by printing a number of tiny halftone dots of varying sizes next to one another.) An extra step with multicolor printing is the separation of colors, that is, the breaking down of color photos into the process colors used for the print (usually cyan, magenta, yellow, and black). In letterpress printing the screened and separated film served first as an original for etching a relief in a metal surface (plate or printing block) from which prints were made. In offset printing the films can be used directly for platemaking.To check color reproduction quality before printing, a test print or proof can be made. This proof is produced photomechanically from the color separation films and simulates the result of the printing process. In the 1970s the scanner emerged, which is used to optoelectronically scan, separate in colors, and screen originals and either directly record them on film by laser or first store them as digital data for further processing in a image processing system. Figure 1.2-25 shows a scanner for producing color separations, such as the ones for a four-color print shown in figure 1.2-26. Platemaking The task of platemaking is to assemble text, pictures, and graphics into pages and pages into sheets. Since the printing formats of most printing presses are essen-
Fig. 1.2-25 Drum scanner for image capture (Tango, Heidelberg)
tially larger than the page format of the printed product, several pages are almost always printed on one sheet. The next step is to produce the plate for the particular printing technology. The image carriers used for letterpress printing were traditionally made by combining blocks of text (consisting of individual letters or lines that were prepared in typesetting) and the blocks from reproduction to produce large metal forms. The platemaking for letterpress printing “flexography” is discussed in detail in section 2.3.3. For offset printing the process films (text, graphics, and pictures) in accordance with the page arrangement are first mounted onto a film in the size of the printing format (offset assembly). The assembly then serves, at the subsequent stage for the purposes of photographic image transmission onto an offset plate in a contact method (offset platemaking).At the next stage the plate © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
Fig. 1.2-26 Color separations for four-color printing (Heidelberg)
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serves as the image carrier for the offset press. In every printing technology a plate must be produced for each color to be printed. Figure 1.2-24 shows how conventional methods (film assembly) as well as computer systems are used for artwork preparation (text, image, graphics) in prepress. Figure 1.2-27 shows how film assembly is set in the copying frame for platemaking in conventional copying process. Both films or plates can also be exposed using digital systems directly based on digital data, as is explained later. For gravure printing, so-called Helioklischographs have been in use since the 1970s to make printing plates. Here, the films are mounted on the copy drum and the signals produced by an optoelectronic scanning head are transmitted to control an engraving stylus. This simultaneously engraves the image onto a copper cylinder which serves as the image carrier for gravure printing. Digital Prepress Through innovations aimed at achieving digital prepress, an evolutionary change has taken place since the end of the 1980s in prepress which has almost entirely eliminated the classical division into the three areas of composition, reproduction, and platemaking. During the 1980s, desktop publishing (DTP) became a serious alternative in prepress. This came as a result of the development of personal computers (PC) with full graphic capacity (e.g., Apple Macintosh), workstations, professional layout, graphic, and image processing software, the page description language PostScript, and high-resolution laser imagesetters with raster image processors (RIP). © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 1.2-27 Positioning of the film assembly in the copying frame for platemaking (Heidelberg)
Desktop publishing means that the capture and editing of text, the capture of pictures (scanning) and their editing, and designing of graphic elements, as well as the completing of pages (layout) can be carried out at one computer station. Used together with an output unit (imagesetter) the PC can also carry out color separations and screening of the finished pages, so that the whole page is exposed on a film (full-page film). Obviously there are also programs for the digital sheet assembly which take over imposition and the positioning of printing aids (register marks, cutting
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marks, etc.). With the help of a large-format imagesetter, films can also be produced in the format of the printing press. computer to film technology is the state of the art. At the beginning of the ’90s DTP took over the prepress almost overnight and has now almost completely replaced the specialized composition and image editing systems as well as photomechanical reproduction. Since around 1995 (even earlier for gravure printing), computer to plate technology (CtP) has played an increasingly important role. CtP means that the printing plate is imaged directly and the intermediate step of imaging a film is abandoned. In gravure, the cylinder is directly engraved using digital information. A further step in the production flow is therefore eliminated and ultimately all the prepress steps are carried out from a single computer workstation. There are already offset printing presses that use integrated exposure units to expose the plates in the press (direct imaging). Since no film is used in CtP, a previous proof must be made digitally, usually in the form of a proof print on a special dye sublimation, ink jet, or thermal printer. Figure 1.2-28 shows how a full-page film is made in digital prepress with a computer to film unit and laser imaging of the film. Figure 1.2-29 shows how the print-
ing plate is produced directly from the database of the digitally described printing sheet. These technological changes in prepress have also brought about fundamental changes in the types of job offered in prepress. The tasks of the three classical occupations of compositor, reproduction technician, and platemaker can today be carried out at one work place by a single skilled worker. This was taken into account in Germany in 1998, when a new course training candidates to become “media designers” (see sec. 13.1.2) was created. After successful training the media designer is proficient in all prepress processes. Consequently, it is considered by many to be the most demanding occupation in the graphics industry. Thanks to DTP practically any author or graphic artist who has access to a PC and the appropriate software can perform at least some of the steps involved in prepress. Although this has opened up many opportunities to individuals, it has, unfortunately, also resulted in an increasing flow of poor-quality printed products flooding the market. The creation of printed products by computer requires not only mastery of the program used and the necessary typography and design know-how, but above all an accurate understanding of the subsequent printing and finishing processes. It is usually only trained experts who are endowed with this expertise.
Fig. 1.2-28 Full-page film output on a computer to film system (Herkules, Heidelberg)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
The diagrams in figure 1.2-30 show the process of evolution in prepress from the individual steps of composition, reproduction, and assembly to an integrated process for platemaking.
1.2.3
Printing
Printing is described as the process of transferring ink onto paper (or another substrate) via a printing plate (fig. 1.2-31). In the course of the centuries many different printing technologies have been developed and these can be divided into four main technologies according to the type of image carrier used as shown in figure 1.2-32.
In section 1.3 (and in particular in chaps. 2 and 5) the different printing technologies are dealt with in detail. In section 1.6 printing presses and systems are described in detail. First, a short overview. Letterpress (Relief) Printing. Here, the printing elements (letters, lines, dots, etc.) are raised. When the printing plate is inked, the ink adheres to the raised (printing) parts and is then transferred under pressure onto the printing substrate. The main examples of this printing technology are letterpress which, until a few decades ago, was the dominant printing technology and flexography which, by the middle of this century, had started to be used more and more in packaging printing. With traditional letterpress
Fig. 1.2-29 Computer to plate system for digital imaging printing plates (Trendsetter, Heidelberg/Creo)
Manuscripts Pictures Graphics
Manuscripts Composition Text films
Reproduction
Line films/ screen films
Text files Assembled Assembly films
Platemaking
Printing plate
a Fig. 1.2-30 Evolution in prepress through digitalization of the processing sections. a Conventional prepress (around 1980); b Digital prepress (around 1997) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Pictures Graphics Image/ graphic files b
with digital repro (DTP) Printing and Computer to Plate plate (CtP)
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Printed product Customer, Agency, Publisher
Plate, etc.
Originals
Printing Process
Prepress Data
Printed pages
Data
Postpress Data
Film, Plate, etc.
Paper, Ink, etc.
Distributor Data
Material, etc.
Consumer, Customer
Database
Information Sources
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Production flow Storage Consumables Supplier
Fig. 1.2-31 The printing process in the production flow for printed products
Letterpress printing
Lithography Image carrier
Image carrier
Ink
Ink Gravure printing
Screen printing Ink
Image carrier Ink
Mesh
Image carrier (stencil)
Fig. 1.2-32 The four main conventional printing technologies (in principle)
printing a hard metal printing plate (lead) is used and in flexography a flexible, soft rubber or plastic plate is employed. Gravure Printing. Here, the printing elements are recessed. The gravure cylinder surface is covered with low viscosity ink (“flooded”) and then passed under a doctor blade which removes all the excessive ink,
leaving ink only in the recesses. The printing material is pressed onto the cylinder surface and takes up the ink from the recesses. The main examples of gravure printing are rotogravure printing and, in the area of arts and crafts, copperplate engraving and die-stamping (also security printing). Lithography. Here, printing and non-printing elements are at the same planographic level but are usually made from different materials (e.g., aluminum and polymer coating) with different chemical and physical surface properties. During printing, the non-printing elements are usually made ink-repellent first (by wetting) and the plate is then inked so that the ink is taken up only by the printing areas. The main example of lithography is offset printing, which is today the dominant printing technology. Offset printing is an indirect printing technology, that is, the ink is first transferred to an intermediate carrier (rubber blanket) and from there onto the substrate (fig. 1.2-33). Screen Printing. Here, the printing plate consists of a fine mesh (e.g., nylon). The non-printing elements of the mesh are blocked by a coating (stencil). As with © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
a
b Fig. 1.2-33 Four-color sheet-fed offset press with a central control console and measuring and control technology. a Press diagram; b Press with remote control console (Speedmaster 74-4-P, Heidelberg)
gravure printing, the screen plate is covered with ink and a squeegee (blade) is passed over it. Through the pressure of the squeegee the ink is pushed through the screen onto the substrate lying below (see also fig. 2.4-11). Printing Systems. In addition to the image carrier, each of these printing technologies require a back pressure element which presses the substrate onto the image carrier to transfer the ink. Gutenberg’s press, an adapted wine screw-type press, worked on the principle of “plane to plane”, that is, the image carrier and the back pressure element were flat. Middle- and large-sized letterpress machines of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries worked on the principle of “plane against cylinder”, i.e., with a flat image carrier and a back cylinder which rolls on the image carrier. The currently dominant technologies of offset printing, as well as gravure printing and flexography, work entirely on the principle of “cylinder against cylinder” to achieve entirely rotating motion sequences in the printing unit. Only in this way is it possible to achieve the production speeds expected today of 5000 up to 100000 impressions per hour. Multicolor printing presses, where several printing units are located one after the other, are largely constructed on the cylinder/cylinder basis. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Figure 1.2-33 shows a multicolor sheet-fed offset press together with the relevant control and measuring equipment in the print room. Figure 1.2-34 gives an impression of the production process in the press room of a printing company. The four classic (conventional) printing technologies have one thing in common: the image carriers (masters) have a physically stable structure and are therefore not variable, that is to say, with the same image carrier it is possible to reproduce the same image in high quality many times. Beginning in the middle of the twentieth century several technologies have been developed that are known today as “non-impact printing technologies” (NIP technology). With these technologies, the printing plate is newly imaged for each printed copy (e.g., electrophotography) or the ink is directly transferred (without a plate or image carrier) onto the substrate (e.g., ink jet). One page after another can then be printed with a different content – even if there are limitations with respect to quality and productivity. An example for a printing system based on electrophotography is the set-up for digital multicolor printing in figure 1.2-35. A detailed description is given in section 1.3.3 and chapter 5. Until a few years ago the non-impact technology was no alternative to conventional printing technologies as far as either quality, speed of production or cost were concerned. However, in recent years in particular, electrophotographic printing has been greatly improved and has therefore become a genuine alternative in some print media market sectors. This is particularly true of low-volume printwork and jobs involving variable data
Fig. 1.2-34 Press room of a printing company
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1 Fundamentals
Delivery
Scanner Fuser
Laser Imaging Unit
Printing Unit Sheet transfer Sheet feeding
a
Sheet reversal Fig. 1.2-36 Web-fed offset printing system (M-600, Heidelberg)
b Fig. 1.2-35 Printing system for four-color printing (NIP technology: electrophotography). a Schematic representation; b Printing system (with sorter for collating individual sheets) (CLC 1000, Canon)
and/or information (such as mailings), since the image can easily be completely changed for each copy. Sheet-fed and web-fed presses. Printing presses can be engineered as either sheet-fed or web-fed presses. Sheet-fed presses have a feeder, one or more printing units, and a delivery (see also fig. 1.2-33). In the feeder the sheets are taken from a pile, aligned, and forwarded to the first printing unit. The sheets are transported through all the printing units by grippers. In the delivery the printed sheets are collected in a pile. Web-fed presses (fig. 1.2-36) have a reel stand, from which the paper web is fed to one or more printing units. This web is then fed straight to a print finishing unit or a rewinder after printing. Web presses for high-quality print production are fitted with dryers to prevent smearing of the ink during print finishing. This is why heat-set inks are used
in offset printing. Newspaper offset printing is usually carried out with cold-set inks, which do not require a special dryer, but offer a lower quality. Gravure and flexographic (letterpress) printing requires a drying section after each printing unit, i.e. after printing each individual color. Offset printing presses and non-impact presses are designed as web-fed and sheet-fed presses, while gravure presses and flexographic presses are almost exclusively engineered as web presses. Web presses reach higher speeds than sheet-fed presses and have the advantage that in-line finishing is easier to carry out. Web presses are usually designed for one particular type of product only (e. g., newspapers). Typical market segments are newspapers, magazines, packaging, and continuous/business forms. Sheet-fed presses have the advantage of shorter set-up times, less start-up waste, and variable formats and substrates. Almost all kinds of printed matter can be produced on sheet-fed presses where high quality and flexibility is a primary concern. Conventional printing presses have become increasingly automated in recent decades. Today, almost all presses come with a remote control station which is used to control most of the press functions. Tasks which were previously always performed manually, such as format adjustment, changing of the printing plate, correction of the register, and cleaning of the rollers and cylinders, can now be carried out at the push of a button. A digital interface for prepress makes it possible to preset the ink flow for a particular printing plate. Several manufacturers already offer offset presses with integrated imaging systems, so-called computer to press/direct imag© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
ing presses (see sec. 4.4). By their very nature, non-impact printing presses are already highly automated and can be almost completely controlled by computer. In the last twenty years the automation of the printing press has led to a considerable increase in productivity and has raised the quality of both printed products and the work place while contributing to economically efficient production of printed matter.
1.2.4
Postpress/Finishing
Print finishing (postpress) includes all those steps which are carried out after printing on paper or another material has taken place (fig. 1.2-37). Finishing processes are as diverse as the methods of producing printed products, whether they involve books, newspapers, folding boxes, or sets of labels. In this section only the most common processes are described. Print finishing is dealt with comprehensively in chapter 7. Processes such as cutting, folding, gathering, and binding are important print finishing technologies for producing a finished product. Figure 1.2-38 shows finishing processes using cutting and folding machines. The system shown in figure 1.2-39 is an example of gathering and
Fig. 1.2-38 Cutting and folding machines for finishing in the press room (Heidelberg)
finishing folded sheets. Figure 1.2-36 shows clearly how a web offset press, which includes a folder and other print finishing equipment, can produce complete brochures. Classical bookbinding, the production of hardcovers, today represents just a small part of the total finishing process. The following list includes the most important
Information Sources
Printed product Customer, Agency, Publisher
Plate, etc.
Originals
Printing Process
Prepress Data
Printed Pages
Data Film, Plate, etc.
Postpress (Finishing) Data
Paper, Ink, etc.
Production flow Storage Consumables Supplier Fig. 1.2-37 Finishing processes in the production flow for printed products © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Distributor Data
Material, etc.
Consumer, Customer
Database
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1 Fundamentals
Fig. 1.2-39 Gathering of folded sheets and further processing (stitching, cutting/3-side trimming, packaging) for the production of brochures (Prosetter 562, Heidelberg)
types of print finishing processes and related companies or departments of industrial print finishing: • Bookbinders produce hardcovers and also perfectbound (glued soft cover) brochures with higher print volumes. • Newspaper and magazine printing companies have web printing presses (offset or gravure) with integrated print finishing units (in-line finishing). • Packaging printers produce a great variety of packaging either off-line (e.g., folding boxes) or in-line (e.g., polyethylene carrier bags). • Label printers are highly specialized in print finishing with automated cutting, die-cutting, and packing machines. • Small and medium-sized printing companies are mostly connected with finishers where business stationery and other commercial printwork is processed, and perfect-bound and saddle-stitched brochures are produced. Important print finishing techniques are explained below using brochure-making as an example: With perfect-bound brochures, glue is applied to the back and a stiff paper cover is attached (e.g., paperbacks, mail-order catalogues, and telephone books). Saddle-stitched brochures consist of several inserted double pages, which are fastened together at the fold with wire (e.g., magazines, periodicals). The production of brochures proceeds in five stages, which are explained below: • Cutting (guillotine cutting). When several folded sheets (signatures) are printed with the same content on a large-format press, they must first be separated. The same applies to brochure covers and bound-in inserts (e.g., reply cards) which are mostly printed in multiple-ups, i.e. many copies with the same content on one sheet. Cutting machines
work with vertical blades, which can cut through the paper pile to a depth of around 20cm (see also fig. 1.2-38). • Folding. The print sheets, which contain several printed pages, are folded with folders depending on format size (fig. 1.2-40). Imposition means arranging the pages on the sheet so that after folding and gathering several folded sheets, the pages are in the correct sequence. Imposition is a prepress process but always depends on the requirements or conditions of the finishing process. In perfect binding (fig. 1.2-40b) the individual folded sheets are arranged behind one another, so sheet one contains pages 1–8 and sheet two contains pages 9–16. In saddle-stitching (fig. 1.2-40a) the folded sheets are placed inside one another, so sheet one contains the 8 outside pages (1–4 and 13–16) and sheet two, the inside eight pages (5–12). • Gathering/collating. If a thirty-two-page brochure is printed with eight pages per sheet, it has four signatures. (The sections of a brochure are also called signatures). With a print volume of one thousand copies there will be four piles of one thousand folded sheets after folding. These must then be separated and arranged in accordance with the specifications of the brochure to be produced. Arranging sheets after one another (for perfect binding) is called collating and is carried out by special collating machines. Putting signatures inside one another (for saddlestitching) is called gathering. This is carried out mostly on saddle-stitchers (fig. 1.2-39), which also carry out the sequential operations of stitching and three-side trimming. • Perfect binding/wire-stitching. The assembled signatures for a perfect-bound brochure are first routed on © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
15 2
13
3
1 Sheet 1 Recto printing (front side)
14
16
4
a
11 6.
9.
7
5 Sheet 2, Recto printing Remark: first fold,
10
12
8
Sheet 1 Verso printing (reverse side)
Sheet 2, Verso printing second fold 7 2
5
3
1
6.
8
4
b
16
14
15
Sheet 1 Verso printing (reverse side) 13
Sheet 1 Recto printing (front side)
derneath the stitching heads, which push the staples through the back and bend them around. • Three-side trimming. The sheets of the brochures bound in this way are not yet separated at the fold (e.g., on the head) as they still form a signature. Since they cannot be opened out at this stage, the folds have to be cut off. The brochures are usually cut on two, or all three sides (head, foot, and front), which at the same time means cutting the brochure to its final size. This cutting must be allowed for when preparing the job and in prepress, so that none of the contents are cut off. There are special three-knife trimmers used to trim three sides of a printed product. Modern gatherer-stitchers and perfect binders are equipped with in-line three-side trimmers. Print finishing has been increasingly automated in recent years, but not nearly to the same extent as printing or, in particular, prepress. Due to the great variety of processes and the complexity of the mechanical processes, more manual intervention is required than in the other two areas (an exception to this is in-line finishing with web printing presses). That is why great efforts are being made in print finishing to introduce CIM (computer-integrated manufacturing) so that print finishing does not become the “bottleneck” in the production of printed material.
10
11
9. Sheet 2, Recto printing
12
1.2.5 Sheet 2, Verso printing
Fig. 1.2-40 Imposition layout (8-page, folded sheet) for two print sheets for a 16-page brochure. a Layout for back-stitching (after gathering); b Layout for perfect binding (after collating)
the spine to enable better penetration of the glue. The back (spine) is then thoroughly coated with glue (usually with hot-melt adhesive), and the cover is wrapped around it and stuck to the back. The machine for these operations is the perfect binder which can also be coupled with the upstream gathering machine and the downstream three-side trimmer. In the gatherer-stitcher the assembled signatures of the saddle-stitched brochure are transported un© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Digital Production Equipment in the Workflow
The production of printed products has increasingly changed from a craftsmen’s trade into industrial production. As in other industrial sectors, computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) is becoming important. In recent years, computers and automated processing have had a considerable influence on prepress. The integration of prepress and press, as well as automation in printing and the integration of related processes, have also reached a certain maturity. In the other areas of production such as finishing, the integration of computers is by no means standard and is still in its infancy. Complete digitization and integration of prepress, press, and postpress is unavoidable if computer-integrated manufacture of printed products is to be achieved. There are two main obstacles to its implementation. At the moment, partially incompatible systems and interfaces still exist and there is only a limited supply of machines and computers that can be electronically controlled, particularly in the print finishing sector.
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1 Fundamentals
Standardized data formats are of vital importance for the integration of prepress, press, and postpress since they facilitate an integrated interface for data which is necessary for the entire workflow. Production planning and control are instruments for monitoring the production process. In chapter 8 the topic of material logistics and data flow will be dealt with in detail. Figure 1.2-41 relates to the theme of material logistics in the press room and in particular the transportation of paper pallets. Planning the manufacture of a printed product is usually an upstream process, i.e., from postpress via press and back to prepress. This is best demonstrated with a simple example: A small sheet-fed offset printshop is given the job of making a catalog. The printshop has a prepress department with computer to plate equipment, a two-color press in 52 cm¥36 cm (approx. 20"¥14") format, a two-color press in 74 cm ¥52 cm (approx. 29"¥20") format and a four-color machine in 74 cm¥52 cm format. The finishing department has a cutting machine, a folding machine, a gathering machine, a gatherer-stitcher with four stations and trimmers as well as a perfect-binder. The customer’s specifications for the making of the catalog require: • • • • •
binding: saddle-stitching, format: DIN A4, total pages: 32, paper: gloss coated art paper, 150g/m2, print: two color (black and cyan as decorative color), pages 1, 2, 31, 32 four-color CMYK,
• layout files with picture and graphics are already provided by the customer, • run length: 1000 copies. The maximum print format of the printshop is 74 cm ¥52 cm, so 8 DIN A4 pages per sheet can be printed. Including the trimming allowance, a paper format of 62 cm ¥45 cm is required. The number of pages comes to 32, and so requires 4 eight-page signatures. Printing and finishing require a 150 sheet waste allowance per signature for a run length of 1000 copies. Therefore 1150¥4 = 4600 sheets are needed. Provided are: 4600 sheets of glossy art paper, 150g/m2, in 62 cm ¥ 45 cm format. The production planning steps are as follows: • Finishing. Because the customer wants a saddlestitched catalog, the workflow is predetermined: the folder is set up for 2 right-angle folds, format 62 cm ¥45cm; folding of 4 signatures of 1000 sheets; makeready of the 4 gatherer-stitcher stations, format DIN A4; gathering, stitching, trimming of 1000 copies; packing of 1000 copies. • Printing. In accordance with the sheet size, the 74 cm¥ 52 cm presses are used. The four outer pages are 4-color, all the others are 2-color. Since we are dealing with a saddle-stitched brochure, one 4/4 color signature (sheet 1) and three 2/2 colored signatures (sheets 2,3 and 4) are required. Making an allowance for waste, the print numbers per signature are: 1150 recto prints + 1150 verso prints = 2300 prints. The workflow is as follows:
Fig. 1.2-41 Transportation of material in the press room to supply sheet-fed presses with paper pallets
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
– four-color press: makeready – 1150 prints – change of printing plate – 1150 prints; – two-color press: makeready – 1150 prints – 5 ¥ change of printing plate – 5¥1150 prints. • Prepress. The pages are imposed according to the imposition layout for saddle-stitching and digitally assembled with 8 pages per sheet, taking into account the 3-side trimming. Folding and cutting marks are added for finishing and register marks and color control strips for printing. The individual printing characteristics of the two presses used for the job are taken into account for the plate exposure. Because of the quality demands of the customer, printing will be carried out on coated paper with a screening of 72 lines per cm. The printing plates are selected in accordance with the size requirements of the printing press. With this upstream planning, a job can only be processed in prepress if the workflow for the subse-
CIP3/PPF file
quent areas is already laid out in accordance with the data provided. This means that almost all the information which is required for the printing and finishing processes flows into an image data file. Digital workflow systems make use of these facts. They extract this information and make it available to the next work areas where it is used for the automatic set-up and presetting of the equipment. This means that existing data does not then need to be entered again at each press. Additional information can be taken from the computer-aided job preparation. The following data which is relevant to production can be extracted from the image data file for the print job described (see also fig. 1.2-42): • For printing: Sheet size, number of signatures for straight (recto) printing and perfecting (verso printing), number and type of inks, ink profile (ink distribution over the sheets in zones). Additional data from the job preparation: machine uti-
CIP3/PPF data CIP3/PPF data CIP3/PPF data CIP3/PPF data Size: DIN A4 Size: 62 ¥ 45 cm Size: 62 ¥ 45 cm Size: DIN A4 Trim: Head 5 mm, Sign: 3 ¥ recto/ Signatures: 4 Thickness: 2 mm foot 8 mm, verso printing Fold: two-directional Run length: 1000 front 15 mm Colors: black, cyan right angle fold Packaging: Shrink film Ink profiles Run length: 1000 + 150 Signatures: 4 Packaging unit: 25 Run length: 1000 + 150 Paper: Art paper, glossy, Staples: 2 Run length: 1000 + 150 Paper: Art paper, glossy, 150 g/m2 Paper: Art paper, glossy, 150 g/m2 150 g/m2 2-color press
Premedia
Folding machine
Prepress
Gathererstitcher
Dispatch
4-color press Postpress CIP3/PPF data Size: 62 ¥ 45 cm Sign.: 1 x recto/verso printing Colors: C, M, Y, K Ink profiles Run length: 1000 + 150 Paper: Art paper, glossy, 150 g/m2 Press Fig. 1.2-42 Production equipment in the digital workflow for the production of print media with interfaces for processing CIP3/PPF data for the example given in the text of how a print job is processed (PPF: Print Production Format; CIP3: Cooperation in Prepress, Press and Postpress) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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1 Fundamentals
lization, run length, allowance for waste, type of material. • For finishing: Sheet size, number of signatures, folding layout, type of binding and trimming. Additional data from the job preparation: machine utilization, run length, allowance for waste, types of material, packaging and distribution. CIP3/PPF (Print Production Format) has been established as the standard format for the extraction and transmission of the data relevant to production. This format was worked out by a consortium of firms in the graphic arts industry (details are given in sec. 8.2.3). CIP3 stands for Cooperation in prepress, press, and postpress. Every printing and finishing machine with a CIP3 interface can be set up automatically for a particular job using a PPF data file. Printing presses with CIP3 interfaces are already available, and the technology is also beginning to penetrate the finishing sector. The aim of the development is the networked printshop where manual intervention in the workflow is minimized and throughput and delivery of the order can be sped up. Figure 1.2-42 shows which CIP3 data can be used to control which machines.
1.2.6
Premedia
The preceding sections of 1.2 have shown how with today’s prepress processes and equipment the entire print job can be created in digital form in a data file. On the basis of this data set, full-page films can be produced or the printing plate produced directly. There are printing systems which can be operated directly with the help of the job file. Print finishing also uses digital information to produce the end product. Printed matter can then be produced using modern technologies which are based on a “digital master” containing all the information on the product and its production. The so-called “electronic media” transmit information to customers using CD-ROM or the Internet, which can be read and viewed using visual display units such as monitors and displays. The “digital master” for the information, which is transmitted in printed or electronic form, is more or less identical. This has resulted in the creation of a premedia stage in the workflow, during which information is recorded, laid out, and made available as a digital data file, and the data is managed and organized. This “digital master”can now be copied and distributed
Electronic Media Equipment to make data visible
Premedia
Distribution
Internet, etc.
Electronic information
CD-ROM, etc. Idea Content Layout
Data Management Printed product
Digital Printing System Originals, Data
Prepress
Printing (conventional)
Customer/User
Production
TV, Radio
Sources of Information
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Finishing
Distribution Multimedia
Print Media
Fig. 1.2-43 Premedia in the workflow for the production of print media and electronic media © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.2 Production of Print Media
in printed or electronic form (print media or electronic media, see fig. 1.2-43). The premedia production process, which does not depend on the output media, is also called “Cross Media Publishing” (CMP). A basic requirement for an effective cross-media publishing system is the assurance of consistency and integrity. All data must be available in digital form and be accessible through a data network. Figure 1.2-43 also shows how premedia is linked with prepress, press, and postpress. It also demonstrates that a completely digital workflow depends on the level of digitization of the systems in the production chain. Figure 1.2-43 also demonstrates how the combination of an electronic medium (e.g., CD-ROM) and a print medium (e.g., a book) is a multimedia application that can be produced by one business. This combination of different data carriers is also called “Mixed Media Publishing” (MMP). MMP can be used for the optimization of publications by combining the advantages of different data carriers. The value of a publication is not increased by the clever combination of individual types of information (text, tone, animation, etc.), but rather by a combination of different data carriers (e.g., CD-ROM, the Internet, and print). Chapter 9 details potential production processes and strategies for printed media and, in particular, production strategies such as print on demand or distributed printing which can be executed on the basis of the workflow shown in figure 1.2-43 (from premedia via prepress, press, and postpress to the end product).
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Further Reading for 1.2.1 Aicher, O.: Typografie. Ernst & Sohn, Berlin 1988. Blackwell, L.: Twentieth century type design. Calmann & King, London 1992. Friedl, F. et al.: Typographie – wann wer wie / Typography – when who how / Typographie – quand qui comment. Könemann, Köln 1998. Frutiger, A.: Type, sign, symbol. ABC-Verlag, Zürich 1980. Gerstner, K.: Kompendium für Alphabeten. Niggli, Teufen 1972. Heller, St.; Chwast, S.: Graphic style. Thames and Hudson, London 1988. Hollis, R.: Graphic design. A concise history. Thames and Hudson, London 1994. Massin, R.: La mise en page. Hoëbeke, Paris 1991. Meggs, Ph. B.: History of graphic design. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York 1983. Morison, St.: Type designs of the past and present. The Fleuron, London 1926. Müller-Brockmann, J.: Rastersysteme. Gerd Hatje, Stuttgart 1981. Müller-Brockmann, J.: Gestaltungsprobleme des Grafikers. The graphic artist and his design problems. Les problèmes d’un artiste graphique. Niggli, Teufen 1991. Ruder, E.: Typografie, ein Gestaltungslehrbuch (GermanEnglish-French). 4th ed. Niggli, Teufen (Switzerland) 1982. Schauer, G. K.: Die Einteilung der Druckschriften, Klassifizierung und Zuordnung der Alphabete. Heinz Moos, München 1975. Tschichold, J.: Meisterbuch der Schrift. Otto Maier, Ravensburg 1953. Willberg, H. P.; Forssmann, F.: Lesetypografie. Hermann Schmidt, Mainz 1997. Zapf, H.: Über Alphabete. Verlagsbuchhandlung Georg Kurt Schauer, Frankfurt/Main 1960.
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1.3 Printing Technologies
1.3.1 1.3.2 1.3.2.1 1.3.2.2 1.3.2.3 1.3.2.4
1.3.1
Overview of Printing Technologies . . . . . . . Printing Technologies with a Printing Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Letterpress/Flexographic Printing . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lithography/Offset Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
40
1.3.3
41 45 48 52 55
1.3.3.1 1.3.3.2 1.3.3.3
Overview of Printing Technologies
Current printing technologies are based on a wealth of inventions. The discoveries made in the engineering sciences, information technology, physics, and chemistry have left their mark on the development of printing technologies. In recent years it is computer and information technology that have had the most lasting impact on the printing industry and printing technologies, and this trend is continuing. The most important aspects in the history of printing technology are dealt with in section 13.1. Definition of the Most Important Terms Relating to Printing Technology [1.3-1] • Printing is a reproduction process in which printing ink is applied to a printing substrate in order to transmit information (images, graphics, text) in a repeatable form using an image-carrying medium (e.g., a printing plate). • The image carrying medium is the storage element (i.e., printing plate or bitmap for controlling ink jet nozzles) that contains all the information needed to apply the ink for the reproduction of images and/or text by printing. • The printing plate or image carrier (master) is the tool (material) by which ink is transferred to the printing substrate or an intermediate carrier for the reproduction of text, graphics and/or images. One printing plate usually generates many prints.
Printing Technologies without a Master (NIP Technologies) . . . . . . . . . . . . Electrophotography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ink Jet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Systems based on Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
58 60 63 65
• The print image is the information provided by the entirety of all the print image elements in all operational stages of an image to be produced by printing. • The print image element is an area that transfers and/or receives ink (e.g., letter type face, line, screen dot or cells) in any operational stage of the presentation to be reproduced by printing. • The ink is the colored substance that is applied to the printing substrate during printing. • The printing substrate is the material receiving the print. • The printing press is the equipment with which the printing process is performed. • The printing process serves to disseminate/reproduce information that is transmitted and processed within this procedural framework. The relevant individual steps in the production of a printed product (see sec. 1.2) are illustrated in figure 1.3-1. The printing stage (press) is highlighted as the central production stage between prepress and postpress/finishing. The production of printed products can be described as an information-processing system, within which the information specification and the information carrier change (i. e., original as slide, film, image, digital data record, impression, plate, print sheet, end product) [1.3-2]. The type of information carrier employed depends on the printing technology used. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Information Sources
Printed product Customer, Agency, Publisher
Plate, etc.
Originals
Printing Process
Prepress Data
Printed pages
Data
Postpress Data
Film, Plate, etc.
Paper, Ink, etc.
Distributor Data
Material, etc.
Consumer, Customer
Database
Production flow Storage Consumables Supplier
Fig. 1.3-1 Production flow (workflow), material and data flow for the production of printed products
An overview of printing technologies is given in figure 1.3-2. A distinction is made between technologies requiring a master, conventional procedures, and socalled non-impact printing (NIP) technologies which do not require a printing plate. Printing technologies requiring a printing plate are technologies like lithography (offset), gravure, letterpress, and screen printing. The most common NIP technologies are electrophotography and ink jet. As can be seen in figure 1.3-2, all printing technologies have the task of transferring information to a substrate (i.e., paper in sheet or web form). The execution of this task requires the prepress phase for procedurespecific preparation of the printing process as well as the finishing phase for fabrication of the end product.
1.3.2
Printing Technologies with a Printing Master
Printing technologies with a master (see also fig. 1.2-32) are also referred to as conventional printing technologies. The printing plate is the informationcarrying medium for all the procedures referred to in figure 1.3-3. Information is generated on the printing © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
substrate by the partial surface transfer of ink. All information is denoted by image elements (transferred ink) and non-image elements (no ink). To enable continuous color tone values to be reproduced in print, such as from photographic originals, the original has to be broken up into extremely small dots (screen dots) that vary in size or are at various distances from each other. This process is called screening. The main function of screening is to generate halftone values, which are intended to simulate the continuous tonal gradation, ending with the conversion of gray images into binary images (described in detail in sec. 1.4). Such screening is necessary because most printing technologies operate on a binary system and can therefore only perform one of two actions, namely to transfer ink (in an evenly distributed layer) or not to transfer ink. Unevenly distributed screen dots and dots varying in size and in shape are illustrated in figure 1.3-4. With the exception of the variable-depth gravure printing technology, printing technologies requiring a printing plate transfer layers of ink to printing plate elements that are basically of the same thickness throughout (the printing plates are generally set up in this way, the printing units in the printing press being designed
41
Originals
Production flow
Ink (liquid)
Gravure
Prepress
Waterless Offset
Lithography
Offset
Letterpress (incl. flexographic printing)
Liquid toner
Press
Sheet or Web (substrate)
Powder toner
Electrophotography
Fig. 1.3-2 Printing technologies and production flow for multicolor printed products
Screen Printing
Conventional Printing (with master)
Liquid ink
Hot-melt ink
Printed product
Color donor (ribbon/foil)
Sublimation
Transfer
Thermography
Drop on Demand
Ink Jet
Continuous
Magnetography
Non-Impact Printing (masterless)
Postpress
Magnetic toner
Ionography
Printing Technologies
Color sensitive coating
Photography
42 1 Fundamentals
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Printing technologies requiring a printing master
Information is defined by the surface relief
Information is defined by the differences in wetting (surface tensions) of a plane surface
Information is defined by openings in the printing master
Printing elements are raised
Printing elements are recessed
Printing elements are oleophilic, non-printing elements are oleophobic
Printing elements are the areas where ink was forced through the printing master
Letterpress
Gravure
Planographic Printing
Screen Printing
FlexoBook Printing graphic Printing
Direct
Indirect (Letterset)
Halftone Gravure
Direct
Direct
Lithography
Intaglio Printing
Indirect
Direct
Direct
Collotype Printing
Offset Printing conventional • waterless
Di-Litho Offset master
Indirect
Direct
•
Indirect
Screen Printing
Direct
Indirect
Stencil Printing
Direct
Fig. 1.3-3 Overview of printing technologies requiring a printing plate (master)
Periodic screen (amplitude-modulated)
Non-periodical, category 1 (frequency-modulated)
Non-periodical, category 2
Non-periodical, category 3
– equal dot spacing – variable dot size – equal dot shape
– variable dot spacing – equal dot size – equal dot shape
– variable dot spacing – variable dot size – equal dot shape
– variable dot spacing – variable dot size – variable dot shape
Fig. 1.3-4 Screen dot patterns and shapes
accordingly). It is only the area and configuration of the print elements on the surface of the printing substrate that vary, and it is by using this that different tone values can be reproduced. The observer receives the impression of a continuous gradation of tone if the human © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
eye can no longer break down the image into its individual print elements. This phenomenon occurs if, for example, a 60 lines/cm (150lpi) screen structure has been used (i.e., dot spacing of 0.16 mm) and it is observed from a distance of approximately 30 cm (1 ft).
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1 Fundamentals
Variable-depth gravure printing generates quantitative ink metering corresponding to the tone value during ink transfer. The printing elements of equal size (halftone dots) only vary in the thickness of their layers depending on the tone values of the original, although in principle the dot size of the individual halftone dots can vary in gravure printing as well as the quantity of ink. All printing technologies requiring a printing plate therefore have in common that information is generated by the surface of the substrate being partially coated with ink. Ink is transferred in the contact zone (nip, printing zone of the surfaces involved) and sufficient process-dependent contact pressure must be applied between the printing plate and the printing substrate or an intermediate carrier. When the layer of ink on the printing plate or intermediate carrier is brought into contact with the printing substrate, only part of the layer of ink is transferred to the substrate. A residual layer remains on the printing plate. Thus the ink is not transferred in full, the ink layer is split. Ink Transfer Letterpress and Planographic Printing (see fig. 1.3-3). The transfer of ink to the printing substrate or intermediate carrier through splitting the ink layer is mainly affected by the following parameters:
p
• the thickness of the ink layer on the printing plate (ink supply), • the period of contact (printing speed and geometry of the printing components),
p
g
Printing plate or intermediate carrier (rubber blanket)
Ink
• the contact pressure (also called printing pressure), • the rheological properties of the ink, • the temperature ratios (temperature has a marked effect on the ink’s rheological properties), • the surface properties of the printing substrate and printing plate or intermediate carrier (wettability, absorbency, roughness, etc.). A further factor influencing the layer of ink on the substrate is the absorption properties of the ink in the printing substrate. The process of transferring ink from the printing plate to the substrate is illustrated in figure 1.3-5 [1.3-3]. With both absorbent and non-absorbent printing substrates, the ink transfer is reduced if the printing speed is increased, as the period of contact then becomes shorter. In indirect printing, ink transfer takes place in two stages. The layer of ink on the printing plate is brought into contact with a rubber blanket and then part of the ink layer adheres to the blanket. Ink is then transferred to the substrate. Ink splitting processes and factors are still beset by many unresolved questions and corresponding research is underway worldwide (see sec. 13.1.3.2). Further information on ink splitting is given in section 2.1.1.3, as are the layer thickness ratios, with the simplified assumption of half-and-half ink splitting and zero absorbency. Gravure Printing. With gravure printing (fig. 1.3-10) the ink remaining in the cells after doctoring is brought into contact with the printing substrate, at
Approximation formula according to Walker-Fetzko for the transfer of ink from the printing plate (or intermediate carrier) onto the substrate x
–m
–m
p = (1 – e –(am ) ){w 0 (1 – e w ) +a [m – w 0 (1 – e w )]} 0
m–
44
m
w Substrate
0
ink supply on the plate [g/m2], ink layer transferred onto the substrate [g/m2], print smoothness indicator [m2/g], fictitious, maximum quantity of ink absorption [g/m2] p ink splitting factor, dimensionless, (e.g., a = m = 0.5), empirical device factor, dimensionless; p Further indicator u = ink distribution ratio. m–p
m p a w0 a x
Fig. 1.3-5 Ink transfer to the printing substrate in the printing zone © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
which point part of this ink is transferred to the substrate. The emptying of the cells is incomplete because of the ink splitting. This transfer of ink is affected by • • • • • • •
tively in one sheet pass, the multicolor print being produced corresponding to the original (see also fig. 1.2-33). The principle of the information flow and the basic steps in the process are illustrated in figure 1.3-6.
the wetting properties of the printing substrate, the surface properties of the materials involved, the properties of the paper, the viscosity of the ink, the printing pressure, the printing speed, and the shape of the cells and their filling level.
1.3.2.1 Letterpress/Flexographic Printing (Examples of presses and details in sec. 2.3). A common feature of all letterpress processes is the fact that the printing elements of the plate are raised above the nonprinting elements. The printing elements that are at the same height (image areas) are coated with a layer of ink of constant thickness by the application rollers. This is followed by the transfer of the ink to the substrate. The printing principle of letterpress printing is illustrated in figure 1.3-7 in the form of a book printing process. The special features of flexographic printing can be seen in figure 1.3-9. The letterpress printing technique is used with the following printing systems:
In all printing technologies, a multicolor print is produced by the superimposed printing of several color separations using the appropriate printing plates (see 1.4.2). The printing plates for the primary color system of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black are produced in prepress. In a printing press with four printing units these four separated colors can be printed consecu-
Proof material Scanning Producing color separations Colored original
Color filter 1 (visual filter)
Producing the printing plate Color separation 1 (black)
Substrate 1st color (black)
Printing plate 1
Inked printing plate 2nd color (cyan)
Color filter 2 (red)
Color separation 2 (cyan)
Printing plate 2
Inked printing plate 3rd color (magenta)
Color filter 3 (green)
Color separation 3 (magenta)
Printing plate 3
Color separation 4 (yellow)
Printing plate 4
1st + 2nd + 3rd color
Inked printing plate 1st + 2nd + 3rd + 4th color
Proof Prepress
1st + 2nd color
Inked printing plate 4th color (yellow)
Color filter 4 (blue)
1st color
Printing press
Fig. 1.3-6 Diagram on the creation of a four-color print (Note: screening function in prepress not included) [1.3.2] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Colored print sheet
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1 Fundamentals
Impression cylinder with substrate
Inking (conceptual)
Printing plate with raised image elements
Fig. 1.3-7 Letterpress (schematic diagram)
• book printing, • flexographic printing, • letterset. Book printing Book printing is the oldest letterpress printing technology. As a result of Gutenberg’s inspired discovery in the middle of the fifteenth century of how to produce individual, moveable type from lead alloy, it became possible to reproduce type elements economically and quickly, and thereby to reproduce books by printing. The following printing principles are applied in book printing (see also fig. 1.6-1): • plane-plane • plane-cylinder
= platen press; = flatbed cylinder printing (fig. 1.3-7, historically: automatic cylinder press); • cylinder-cylinder = rotary printing. The importance of letterpress printing has diminished in recent decades, mainly because of the expense of producing printing plates. Quality printing in larger formats can only be achieved on flatbed cylinder presses and only low printing outputs are possible with these presses. The variety of printing plates and printing-plate components that can be used is characteristic of letterpress printing: hot-metal composition printing plates, original letterpress plates, copies of letterpress plates. These may, in turn, consist of various materials: lead alloys, zinc, copper, and photopolymer plastics, and, in art printing, wood and linoleum. Printing plates for platen printing and flatbed cylinder printing consist almost exclusively of several fixed, rigid, flat individual component parts. Semicircular
cast lead plates (stereos) or flexible plastic plates, socalled wash-off printing plates, are suitable for rotary printing. Hot-metal composition and photocomposition are suitable for the production of printing plates for text in book printing. The hot-metal composition process, which predominated up to the end of the seventies, now plays only a minor role in small-format commercial printing, in older letterpress printshops, and in the printing of collector’s items. Photocomposition for the production of letterpress printing plates is described in sections 2.3.2 and 3.1.7. Various letterpress printing plates (also called blocks) are used to print images and graphics in the letterpress printing process: • Manually produced printing plates (such as woodcuts) still play an important role in original graphic artwork. • Letterpress printing plates produced by photomechanical/etching techniques and by electronic engraving are outdated. • Photomechanical/wash-off procedures predominate. Photopolymer plates are now used instead of the formerly exclusively used metal (particularly zinc) plates. Wash-off printing plates (photopolymer plates) can be produced quickly and reliably. The range of wash-off printing plates available includes an extensive variety of different printing plates with various wash-off systems, depths, and base materials. Nyloprint printing plates (made by BASF), for example, are made of a light-sensitive plastic that is firmly connected to the base material by a bonding layer. The base material consists of aluminum, steel, or plastic, depending on application. Printing plate production is described in section 2.3.2. Figure 1.3-8a shows a micro-photograph of a section of a letterpress printing plate (brass printing plate). Prints produced using the letterpress technology can be recognized by an accumulation of ink at the edges (fig. 1.3-8b). Flexographic Printing Flexographic printing is the only letterpress process that is still showing growth, mainly in packaging, label, and newspaper printing. The main feature of flexographic printing is the use of flexible printing plates that are relatively soft compared to book printing plates and enable special ink feeding. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
More ink at the edge
a
b
Fig. 1.3-8 Microphoto of letterpress printing. a Detail of the printing plate; b Impression on the printing substrate (FOGRA)
Using the flexible (soft) printing plate and the appropriate ink (low viscosity) for the printing substrate, it is possible to print on a wide range of absorbent and non-absorbent printing substrates. The principle on which a flexographic printing unit works is illustrated in figure 1.3-9. The low-viscosity ink is transferred to the printing plate via a roller that is evenly screened with cells, the so-called screen roller/anilox roller (screen width 200–600 lines/cm, ceramic or hardchromed metal surface). The rubber or plastic plate is attached to the printing plate cylinder. Ink is transFig. 1.3-9 Flexographic printing unit (rotary letterpress, schematic diagram)
Printing plate (soft)
ferred to the printing substrate by the pressure of the impression cylinder. The use of a blade (together with the ink supply system) on the screen roller has a stabilizing effect on the printing process resulting from even filling of the cells on the screen roller. With the rubber plates in exclusive use earlier, only a low to moderate printing quality of solid motifs and rough line drawings could be achieved. For today’s higher-quality requirements, especially in the printing of packaging, photopolymer wash-off plates are used, such as “Nyloflex” from BASF and “Cyrel” from DuPont. These allow screen resolutions of up to about 60 lines/cm. Letterset In letterset printing, the image of the letterpress plate (stable, hard letterpress plate) is transferred to the paper via an intermediate carrier (a cylinder covered with a blanket) – that is by indirect letterpress printing. By analogy with the offset printing process as an indirect lithographic technology, letterset printing could also be called offset letterpress printing technology – but to avoid misunderstandings, the term lithographic offset printing would need to be used rather than the term offset printing. Printed Products The following are typical letterpress printed products: • small-format jobs, • business cards,
Plate cylinder
Printing substrate Impression cylinder (hard) Elastic printing plate with raised image elements
Anilox roller Ink supply (chambered doctor blade system)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Cells of the anilox roller filled with ink
Inked up image element
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1 Fundamentals
• • • •
form printing, packaging printwork (flexographic printing), labels (flexographic and letterpress printing), carriers and bags (flexographic printing).
1.3.2.2 Gravure Printing (See sec. 2.2 for examples of presses and other details). The distinctive feature of gravure printing technology is the fact that the image elements are engraved into the surface of the cylinder. The non-image areas are at a constant, original level. Prior to printing, the entire printing plate (non-printing and printing elements) is inked and flooded with ink.Ink is removed from the non-image (by a wiper or blade) before printing, so that ink remains only in the cells. The ink is transferred from the cells to the printing substrate by a high printing pressure and the adhesive forces between printing substrate and ink. The principle of gravure printing is illustrated in figure 1.3-10. Rotogravure printing is used for the economical production of long print runs. Gravure printing forms are usually cylindrical. A special feature of industrial rotogravure printing is the fact that a whole cylinder (and no plate) is used per color separation. This means that in a four-color press four separate cylinders have to be changed for each new job. Consequently, a company that has a lot of repeat jobs is forced to store a large number of cylinders. Depending on the printing format, gravure printing cylinders are generally rather heavy and require special conveying and handling gear systems. The various gravure printing techniques for reproducing the continuous tones of the original are shown in figure 1.3-11. It should be noted here that only variable-depth gravure printing and more particularly
variable-area/variable-depth gravure are of any significance, due to their high quality. Pure variable-area (halftone) gravure is scarcely used nowadays. Traditional, that is to say only variable-depth, gravure printing is also increasingly losing its importance since the printing plate production is based on complicated copying and etching processes that are almost impossible to standardize (see sec. 2.2.1). It is for this reason that variable-area/variable-depth gravure printing processes, which in industry are based on electronic/mechanical engraving (using a stylus) of the gravure cylinder, are becoming prevalent. There are two familiar options for the structure of the gravure cylinder (fig. 1.3-12). The steel cylinder has an electroplated coating of base copper (typically about 2 mm thick), with an approximately 100 µm-thick coating of engravable (cuttable) copper applied onto it. The steel cylinder has either the directly electroplated engraving copper or a so-called ballard skin on the base copper layer. This peeling layer is also applied by electroplating onto the base copper, over a separating layer, and the print image is engraved into it. (There are also rarely used cylinder surface recycling methods as described in sec. 2.2.) In screening for gravure printing, the image is broken up into printing elements, the cells, and then the non-printing elements, the cell walls. The cell walls serve to guide the blade when excess ink is being stripped. After the doctoring process, ink remains only in the cells. If ink were to remain on the cell walls, scumming would occur in the print, and if there were localized blade defects, blade streaks. Figure 1.3-13a shows a microphotograph of the surface of a gravure printing cylinder. The cells and cell
Fig. 1.3-10 Gravure printing (schematic diagram)
Impression cylinder/roller
Gravure cylinder Image elements are equally spaced but differ in area and volume (variable depth and variable area)
Blade Ink fountain
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Gravure cylinders
Variable-depth gravure cylinders (conventional)
Etching process
Laser engraving
Variable-depth and variable-area gravure cylinders (semi-autotypical)
Variable-area gravure cylinders (autotypical)
Etching process
Direct engraving • stylus • laser (in the development phase) • electron beam (ceased)
Photopolymerization (wash-out process)
Manual etching and engraving technique e.g., with artistic work
Fig. 1.3-11 Overview of the production of gravure cylinders
walls can be detected. On the one hand, this cell structure can be seen in the printed product (fig. 1.3-13b) and on the other, the “flowing apart” of the individual image elements can also be seen – the individual cells are no longer visible in the impression because of “cell wall flooding.” Gravure printing cylinders for variabledepth gravure printing are produced by etching. This topic is dealt with in greater detail in sec. 2.2.1. A brief explanation of the conventional method of electromechanical engraving is given in figure 1.3-14. The scanning drum and the form cylinder to be engraved are either connected to each other by mechanical
Cells (up to 50 1m deep)
Chromium layer (5–8 1m)
Engraving copper or Ballard skin (approx. 100 1m; good machining properties) Base copper (approx. 2 mm) Nickel layer (1–3 1m) Steel core
Fig. 1.3-12 Structure of a gravure cylinder © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
means or by a “self-synchronous system.” A bromide film (the positive of the print image) is scanned optically on the scanning drum with the respective gradation and density range. A corresponding amount of light is reflected, depending on the brightness of the pixel which has already been scanned on the bromide film and this is converted into an electric signal. The output signals of the scanning head, the image data, are processed electronically in the computer and the engraving head (fig. 1.3-15 shows an electromechanical engraving head) can be controlled accordingly. The computer feeds two signals to the engraving head – the actual image signal and the screen signal defining the screen resolution and the angular position. Both produce a modulated signal to control the engraving head. The angular position of the screen is produced by the superimposed motion of the engraving head (feed and frequency) and the cylinder (circumferential speed). Nowadays engraving is mostly done directly instead of scanning a bromide film, with the signals for the engraving head coming from the digital database containing the printing cylinder specifications. Engraved printing cylinders are more prone to “missing dots” (cells which do not print completely) than etched printing cylinders since the cells transfer less ink to the printing substrate due to their shape. Electrostatic printing aids that raise the meniscus of the ink surface in the screen cells for improved wetting of
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1 Fundamentals
approx. 200 1m
Bromide film
Scanning heads a
Cell walls Fig. 1.3-14 Scanning the bromide film (with positive image), scanner with up to 12 scanning heads (Helio-Multiscan, Hell Gravure Systems)
b Fig. 1.3-13 Microphoto of gravure printing. a Electromechanically engraved gravure cylinder; b Print of an engraved gravure cylinder (variable area/variable depth, four-color). The “serrated teeth structure” at the edges is clearly discernible – a characteristic of gravure printing
the printing substrate are used to eliminate or prevent “missing dots“ in rotogravure printing. The very high costs that printing cylinder production entails is the decisive reason why rotogravure printing can only be used cost-effectively to print mass-circulation products (run length > 500000). The screen resulting in gravure printing (and also in etching) is a periodic screen.A moiré effect is often produced in multicolor printing when periodic screens are used. The moiré effect is minimized in offset and/or letterpress printing by the screen being suitably angled for each individual printing ink. In gravure printing a
screen angle can be simulated by elongating or compressing the cells. Some typical gravure printing values are listed in table 1.3-1. The printing unit of a gravure printing press is illustrated in diagram form in figure 1.3-16. (A detailed description is given in sec. 2.2.) The gravure cylinder is immersed in the ink, which is contained in an ink trough. The gravure cylinder cells are completely flooded in the ink trough. Excess ink is removed by the blade, so that ink remains only in the cells and the cell walls are free of ink. Hydrodynamic back-pressure is built up beneath the blade, which mainly depends on the contact angle of the blade, the speed of the press and the viscosity of the ink. In modern, very high-powered gravure printing presses, a steep angle of blade contact is now mostly preferred. In multicolor gravure printing, drying must be carried out downstream of each printing unit (drying zone) since wet-on-wet printing, such as offset printing, is not possible with low viscosity gravure printing inks (typical value approximately 0.1 Pa·s). The drying of gravure printing ink (pure evaporation/vaporization drying) is described in section 1.7.1.2. Pad printing (indirect gravure printing) is dealt with in section 2.5.4. Here, an intermediate carrier is used for the print image rather than printing directly onto the printing substrate from the printing cylinder. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Image data processing (Engraving amplifier) From the image data memory Digital signal
Cylinder with engraving systems
D Conversion Digital
Analog
Gravure cylinder
A Analog signal
Stylus
Images signal
Control cutting depth Controls constant up and down movements
Vibration
Frequency generator 4000 Hz or 4000 cells per second a
b
Fig. 1.3-15 Cylinder engraving with stylus. a Control of the engraving head; b Electromechanical cylinder engraving (Hell Gravure Systems)
Areas of Application, Features and Printed Products Gravure printing is a very good illustration printing technology, achieving very high image quality. When variable-depth and electronically engraved gravure printing cylinders are used, the cells take up different amounts of ink. The different layer thickness produced on the substrate resulting from this corresponds to the tonal gradations of the original. Consequently, a gravure-printed image comes very close to the continuous tonal gradations of an original (e. g., photographic picture). The image effect is improved even more by the fact that, after the ink has been transferred, the liquid ink flows out somewhat in the areas of deeper shades on the substrate, as a result of which no sharply defined screen dots are produced and the cell walls of the printing cylinder are not visible. The typical features of gravure printing are: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• serrated or jagged edge on letters and lines; • very good image reproduction, similar to continuous tone because the screen cells are of different depths (i.e., different volume of ink); • with variable-depth gravure printing, square screen dots of the same size are present in all tone values. In light tone values, the cells often print out incorrectly; • in variable-depth and variable-area gravure printing, screen dots of different sizes and different color saturation levels are produced. Typical gravure printed products are high-circulation, high-quality printed products such as: • periodicals, magazines, mail-order catalogs; • plastic films;
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Table 1.3-1 Typical gravure printing specifications/ numbers
Printing press Web width
2.40 m, maximum 3.60 m (illustration or publication gravure printing) 1.20–1.40 m, maximum 1.60 m (packaging gravure printing) Web speed 10 m/s (2000 ft/min), maximum 15 m/s (illustration or publication gravure printing) 5 m/s, maximum 6.5 m/s (packaging gravure printing) Cylinder circumference 800–1600 mm (illustration or publication gravure printing) Screen ruling
40–140 lines/cm (100–350 lpi) typical of illustration or publication gravure printing: 60–70 lines/cm
Gravure (variable area/variable depth, stylus) Frequency Number of lines (engraving heads) Cell geometry
4 kHz (4000 cells/s), up to 8 kHz 8–16 in illustration gravure printing, 1 in packaging gravure printing Width (transverse diagonals): minimum 30 1m, maximum 230 1m Depth: 10–30 1m (maximum 50 1m) depending on the angle of the diamond stylus Cell wall width: 3–5 1m
Gravure cell shapes (depending on screen ruling and angle) various, depending on the color separation: compressed: cyan elongated: magenta coarse: yellow (coarser screen) fine: black (finer screen, e.g., type)
• metal foils; • transparent films, carrier bags; • security papers, stamps, bank notes. 1.3.2.3 Lithography/Offset Printing As the currently most important technology, offset printing is explained in detail in section 2.1 with a description of the technology itself as well as printing plate production, examples of machinery, and how the inking and dampening units work. In lithography the printing and non-printing parts are on the same level. The distinctive feature of the printing areas is the fact that they are ink-accepting, whereas the non-printing plate elements are ink-repellent. This effect is produced by physical, interfacial surface phenomena. Lithographic printing can be subdivided into:
• Stone lithography (direct printing process using a stone printing plate), • collotype (direct printing process), • offset printing (indirect printing process), and • di-litho (direct printing process with offset printing plate). Lithography was invented by Alois Senefelder in 1796. The image to be printed was drawn on the stone with a special ink. The stone was dampened before it was inked up, after which the non-image areas of the stone surface did not take on ink (fig. 1.3-17). Collotype is another lithography technology. Its beginnings (1856) can be traced back to A. L. Poitevin. Continuous tones can be reproduced without screening. Very high print quality can be achieved (e.g., moiréfree). A light-sensitive layer of gelatin is exposed on a © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Web outlet
Dryer
Hot air supply
Web feed
Web idler roller
Device for changing the gravure cylinder
Impression roller Blade Gravure cylinder
Fig. 1.3-17 Stone lithographic press (manually operated)
Inking unit
Fig. 1.3-16 Printing unit of a gravure printing press
glass base over a negative and then developed.Areas having different swelling properties in relation to water are produced. After the printing plate has been dampened, differentiated color absorption properties are produced. Like stone lithography, collotype is only used for artistic printed products (with very short print runs). Offset printing is the major lithographic technology. It is an indirect lithographic technology, in which the ink is first transferred from the printing plate onto a flexible intermediate carrier – the blanket – and then onto the substrate. The principle of offset printing is shown in figure 1.3-18. To achieve an ink-repellent effect on the printing plate (different interaction of printing plate surface and ink), there are two commonly used systems : • Conventional offset printing technology: Dampening of the printing plate with dampening solution (water with additives). The dampening solution is applied to the plate in a very fine film by dampening © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
rollers. The non-image areas of the plate are hydrophilic, that is, water-receptive and the inkaccepting surfaces are oleophilic, and are therefore almost totally unreceptive to water. The film of dampening solution prevents the transfer of ink. Since this technology is by far the most widespread, the repellent effect between ink and dampening solution is generally always associated with “offset printing.” Consequently, inking and dampening units are needed for “offset printing.” A typical complete printing unit is illustrated in figure 1.3-19. • Waterless offset printing technology: The printing plate surface is basically ink-repellent, for instance, due to an appropriate layer of silicone (fig. 1.3-20b). The ink-receptive base area is exposed by the deliberate interruption of the layer of silicone (approximately 2 µm thick). This procedure is known as “waterless offset” (quite frequently even as “dry offset”). Corresponding printing plates and special inks must be used for both systems. In a conventional offset press, two different substance flows have to be taken into consideration for the inking up of the printing plate:
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Fig. 1.3-18 Offset printing (lithography, schematic diagram)
Inking unit Plate cylinder
Ink-accepting area (oleophilic)
Dampening unit Printing plate Inking up
Ink-repellant (hydrophilic) area
Residual ink layer
Dampening Blanket cylinder
Inking unit
Plate cylinder Dampening unit Blanket cylinder
Impression cylinder
Fig. 1.3-19 Typical sheet-fed offset printing unit
Impression cylinder with substrate (sheet or web)
• the ink supply, • the dampening solution supply. The ink supply over the surfaces is interlinked with the dampening solution supply in a complex manner. Typically, the printing plate base material consists of aluminum or polyester. The layer producing the image is then applied to it. Sections of an offset plate are illustrated in figure 1.3-20; figure 1.3-20a shows a conventional offset plate and figure 1.3-20b a waterless plate. A press diagram of a five-color sheet-fed offset printing press with perfector (for in-line printing on both sides of the sheet) in unit design is given in figure 1.3-21. The entire range of print media, from an individual brochure to a high-quality catalog, can now be produced to a high standard with the offset printing technology. The di-litho technology, a lithographic technology in which the printing plate prints directly onto the printing substrate, was specially developed for newspaper printing. The advantage of this technology was that conventional letterpress rotary printing presses could be used. The printing units of these presses were modified by the installation of a dampening unit. Printing was done with conventional printing plates, although a special coating had to be applied to them on account © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Fig. 1.3-20 Microphoto of offset printing plates (halftone dots on the printing plate). a Conventional offset, aluminum plate; b Waterless offset, plate silicone coated: Toray (FOGRA)
a
b
Fig. 1.3-21 Typical example of a sheet-fed offset press (Speedmaster SM 74-5-P-H, Heidelberg)
of the very high stress caused by the direct contact with the paper and the high stability over the entire print run required in newspaper printing. This technology only played a temporary role. When new investment was made in newspaper printing companies, this technology was replaced by web offset presses, which print onto the substrate via a blanket cylinder (see sec. 2.1.3). 1.3.2.4 Screen Printing (See sec. 2.4 for examples of machinery and other details). Screen printing is a process in which ink is forced through a screen (fig. 1.3-22). The screen printing stencil serves as a printing plate. More often than not, the screen is a fine fabric made of natural silk, plastic, or metal fibers/threads. Plastic or metal fabric is generally used nowadays. Ink is imprinted/transferred through the image-specific, open mesh that is not covered by the stencil. The screen printing plate is therefore a combination of screen and stencil. It is the material, the fineness of the screen (the number of screen threads per centimeter of fabric length), the thickness of the screen, the distance between the top and bottom sides of the screen, and the degree of opening of the screen (the degree of screen opening ar© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
eas as a percentage describes the ratio of the total of all mesh openings to the entire surface of the fabric) that determine the printing properties and quality of the fabric (screen). Fabrics can be obtained in levels of fineness from 10 to 200 fibers/cm. The most frequently used fabrics are those between 90 and 120 fibers/cm. Figure 1.3-23a shows a microphoto of a screen fabric (polyamide fibers), with the non-printing, and therefore covered, sections of the screen. Figure 1.3-23b shows a microphoto of a halftone color print. The notches on the edges of the screen dots come about due to the screen structure. The screen work and printing of very detailed illustrations necessitate the use of very high levels of fabric fineness that are matched to the resolution requirements of print image reproduction. For screen work, fabric fineness (threads/cm) should be around three to four times greater than the screening of the print image (lines/cm) – therefore nine to sixteen different screen dot area surfaces per screen cell. The stencil on the fabric defines the actual print image. The stencil is on the side of the screen opposite the side on which the squeegee (blade) works, to avoid
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1 Fundamentals
Screen with stencil
Blade Frame
Base plate (stationary) Stencil covers the screen Residual ink
Printing master (screen) a
Non-ink permeable area (stencil)
Ink film Ink permeable area
Substrate (e.g., paper)
Fig. 1.3-22 Screen printing (schematic diagram)
damage and wear to the stencil. Manual stencils, which can be produced as drawn or cut stencils and transferred to the underside of the screen, are used for simple, solid-area print work. For sophisticated printed products (halftone prints, multicolor printing) it is almost exclusively screen emulsions with diazo sensitizing that are used (to produce stencils). After coating and drying, a right-reading, positive film copy is exposed on the coated side (the side not facing the squeegee) using UV light. The UV light hardens the film emulsion on all non-image areas (transparent areas of the film copy). The image areas themselves are not hardened and can be removed by a jet of water during developing. This is followed by the drying process. Possible defects can be eliminated with masking lacquer (screen filler). In practice, three methods are used for screen printing (fig. 1.3-24): • The flat-to-flat method (flatbed). The printing plate and the printing substrate are both flat. The ink is transferred through the mesh apertures and onto the printing substrate by the movements of a squeegee.
b Fig. 1.3-23 Microphoto of screen printing. a Screen fabric with stencil; b Halftone dots of a three-color screen print
• The flat-to-round method and body printing. – The printing plate is flat, printing onto the printing substrate is done via a rotating cylinder. Printing plate and impression cylinder move synchronously in one direction in the course of which the ink is transferred through the mesh apertures and onto the printing substrate by a stationary squeegee. – Printing form and squeegee are adapted to the shape of the printing substrate (curved, arched, round). Printing plate and printing substrate run synchronously in one direction and the squeegee is in a fixed position. This procedure is used for printing on cans and balls, that is, on curved surfaces. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Ink
Movable blade (squeegee)
Printing plate (stencil) Frame
Stationary screen
Printing principle: flat-to-flat (flatbed)
Substrate
Base plate (stationary)
a
Stationary blade Frame Movable screen
Stationary blade
Movable screen e.g., tennis ball Rotating cylinder
Substrate
Printing principle: flat-to-round (also for cylindrical products)
b
“Body printing” (on round products)
Printing cylinder with screen Screen
Ink
Blade Substrate
Impression cylinder c Fig. 1.3-24 Screen printing technologies. a Flatbed; b Flat-to-round/“body printing”; c Rotary printing
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Printing principle: round-to-round (rotary print)
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• Round-to-round method (rotary printing). The printing screen is cylindrical. Printing plate, printing substrate, and impression cylinder move synchronously; ink is transferred from inside through the cylindrical printing plate and onto the substrate. The actual printing process can be sub-divided into four different sub-areas (fig. 1.3-25, for greater clarity the screen is shown in a simplified form). The screen is held by a screen frame. The substrate lies flat on the base plate, which forms the printing body, and is held there securely during the printing process. The volume of ink on the screen is moved like a tidal wave by the squeegee. The ink beneath the tidal wave penetrates the screen. This area is known as the filling zone. Once again the ink in front of the squeegee edge in the contact zone passes through the fabric and makes contact with the printing substrate. Behind the edge of the squeegee, in the adhesion zone, the ink ensures that the printing form adheres to the substrate. The screen’s pulling strength pulls ink fibers out of the ink film in the “release zone,” meaning that residual ink remains in the mesh of the screen and an even layer of ink remains on the substrate. It is possible to apply a very thick layer of ink in the screen printing process (normal values are around 20–100 µm, offset printing values are typically around 0.5–2 µm). The thickness of the stencil (the distance that the stencil stands above the screen) determines the thickness of the layer of ink. The most varied types of ink with the most varied properties are available to the screen printer, depending on the print job and the substrate. There is a larger selection of inks for screen printing than any other printing technology.
Fig. 1.3-25 Printing process sections (screen printing)
Typical screen printing products are: • • • • •
textiles/materials, printed T-shirts, printed toys, fronts of televisions, radios etc., automobile dashboards, measuring equipment, etc., • packaging (plastic bags), • printed circuit boards, • large-format advertising posters.
1.3.3
Printing Technologies without a Master (NIP Technologies)
An overview of the various printing technologies is given again in figure 1.3-26, sub-divided into conventional printing technologies (with master) and non-impact printing technologies (masterless). Printing technologies, which do not require a stable, physical, fixed image carrier and can, in principle, generate a different printed page print per print are explained below with examples. This type of process is referred to as non-impact printing (NIP technology). The term non-impact is based on early digitally controlled printing systems where computing centers would often print out data using dot matrix printers. Typefaces for matrix printers of this kind were controlled electronically and the information transferred to the paper via typeforming pins impacting an ink ribbon. Such impact systems have been superseded by electrophotographic technologies, in which type is no longer transferred to the paper by impact – as was the case with matrix printers. Instead, a laser sends information to an intermediate carrier,a drum with a photoconductive coating,with-
Blade Frame
Printing plate (screen, stencil)
Frame Squeegee
Paper Filling zone Adhesion Release zone Contact zone zone
Base plate (print body)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Offset
Ink (liquid)
Original
Gravure
Prepress
Waterless Offset
Lithography
Production flow
Letterpress incl. Flexography
Fig. 1.3-26 Printing technologies for the production of print media
Screen printing
Conventional Printing (with master)
Liquid toner
Press
Sheet or Web (substrate)
Powder toner
Electrophotography
Magn. toner
Liquid ink
Hot-melt ink
Printed product
Color sensitive coating
ink/toner
Transfer Color donor (ribbon/foil)
Sublimation
Photography
“X”-Graphy
Thermography
Drop on Demand
Ink Jet
Continuous
Magnetography
Non-Impact Printing (masterless)
Postpress
Ionography
Printing Technologies
1.3 Printing Technologies 59
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out impact (non-impact) in the traditional sense. The latent (nonvisible), charged image stored on this drum is inked with toner and then transferred to the paper.There is, of course, contact between the inked (toned) information carrier and the paper during printing, but the information is not transferred by impact. This process, therefore, is considered as non-impact printing. As shown in figure 1.3-26, various physical processes are used to realise, such non-impact printing procedures. The predominating technologies are electrophotography and ink jet printing. Ionography, magnetography, thermography, and photography are, however, also used. New physical processes that could be incorporated in non-impact printing are constantly being discussed and developed in specialist fields. In figure 1.3-26, these new developments are referred to as “X”-Graphy. The masterless printing technologies are described in detail in chapter 5, together with various examples of their practical application. The two most important NIP technologies electrophotography and ink jet printing are explained in the following introduction with examples. 1.3.3.1 Electrophotography The principle of electrophotography is illustrated in figure 1.3-27. The electrophotographic printing process can be broken down into five steps: 1. Imaging Imaging is carried out by charging a suitable photoconductive surface (creating a homogeneous Light source 1 (laser or Latent, Imaging LED-array) Photoconductor electrostatic image Corona charge --- - - 2 ++++ + + ++ ++ --+ ++ Light + Inking ++ ++ -+ 5 discharge + + Cleaning + + Electrostatic forces + + + - hold the toner Brush and + + + - + Suction + + - + + + + - -Paper Delivery Feeder Corona (+) 4 3 Toner transfer directly onto the paper Toner fixing (or indirectly via intermediate carriers) (heat, pressure) Fig. 1.3-27 The basic structure of electrophotography
charged surface) with subsequent imaging via a controlled light source (this may be scanning laser light or light emitted by an LED array [light-emitting diodes]). The print image corresponds to the positioning of the light signals on the photoconductor drum. The homogeneous charged image on the surface is discharged in parts as a result of exposure and changed in accordance with the desired print image. (Since imaging in electrophotography can be done both by laser light and by light given off by light-emitting diodes, the frequently-used term “laser printer” instead of the term “electrophotographic printer” is misleading.) 2. Inking Special inks are used for electrophotography. These may be powder or liquid toners, which may vary in structure according to their composition, and contain the colorant in the form of pigments. The ink is the fundamental and decisive element for the impression. Inking is done via systems which transfer the fine toner particles, approximately 8 µm in size, without contact to the photoconductor drum (similar to the example shown in fig. 1.3-27). The toner charge is configured in such a way that the charged areas of the photoconductor surface accept the toner. (As shown in the example, imaging has, therefore, been done with a negative image because the positive charges have been discharged by exposure.) Therefore, after inking, the latent image on the photoconductor drum becomes visible where the toner is applied. 3. Toner transfer (printing) The toner may be transferred directly onto the paper, although in some cases it may also be transferred via intermediate systems, in the form of a drum or a belt. As shown in figure 1.3-27, transfer mostly takes place directly from the photoconductor drum to the substrate. To transfer the charged toner particles from the drum surface to the paper, electrostatic forces are generated via a charge source (corona) in the nip and it is these forces, supported by the contact pressure between the drum surface and the paper, that transfer the particles to the paper. 4. Fixing the toner A fixing unit is required to anchor the particles of toner on the paper and create a stable print image. This is usually designed so that melting and consequent anchoring of the toner on the paper takes place by heat application and contact pressure. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
5. Cleaning As shown in figure 1.3-27, residual charges and individual particles of toner remain on the drum after the print image has been transferred from the photoconductor drum to the paper. To prepare the drum so that the next image can be printed, both mechanical cleaning and electrical cleaning of the surface are necessary. The mechanical cleaning, which removes particles of toner, can be done by means of brushes and/or suction, while the electrical “cleaning” (neutralizing) is accomplished by homogeneous illumination of the surface, after which the surface is electrically neutralized and is free from toner particles. The photoconductor drum is now charged again with a homogeneous, charged image via the corona, with subsequent imaging in accordance with the desired print image (as described in step one). From the procedural steps described, it is easy to see that electrophotography with a fixed, engraved print image operates without a master. A different charged image can be applied to the photoconductor drum after each rotation. This means that it is possible to generate a completely different print image rotation-byrotation, print by print. Unlike printing methods that use a fixed image carrier (e.g., a plate), this process (taking a print run of one hundred identical impressions, for example) requires that the same print image be created again and again, rotation by rotation, in the form of a latent charged image. This repetition could lead to processrelated variation in the print image. Such fluctuations may be caused by tolerances employed to create the charged image and/or by the tolerances (involved in the technical process) produced during the inking of the photoconductor with toner and the subsequent, electrically-supported transfer of the image to paper. Therefore non-impact printing technologies may produce greater variation within a print run than is the case with technologies requiring a master. On the other hand, the fascination and the advantage of this technique lie in the fact that a completely different print image can be created rotation by rotation (variable printing), thus it is not necessary to generate a mechanical master for each printed sheet. Extremely short print runs (even just one copy) can be produced economically in this way (print on demand). Furthermore, each page of a brochure, from the first to the last page, can be produced in succession; the pages for the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
second copy are not printed until the first book has been completed (book on demand). Also, personalizing a part of the print images, for instance by inserting an address or recipient-specific additional information, can be directly carried out copy by copy (personalization, customizing). An example of an electrophotographic printing system for multicolor printing is shown in figure 1.3-28. This system is based on the unit design principle like sheet-fed offset presses. The configuration illustrated in figure 1.3-28 comprises four electrophotographic printing units which transfer the usual process colors of black, cyan, magenta, and yellow to the printed sheet in succession. In the example shown, the photoconductor drum is imaged via an optical system in which the laser light is deflected onto the photoconductor drum by means of a rotating mirror and special optics (fig. 1.3-29). The laser beam is guided over the drum’s surface at high speed. Directed by a digitally-controlled modulator, the ray of light is turned on or off depending on the image, that is, the charge is discharged or remains on the previously charged photoconductor drum. The system shown is also known as an ROS imaging system (Raster Output Scanner). The transfer of paper by means of a transfer belt is an interesting aspect of the example illustrated in figure 1.3-28 where no grippers are used to transfer the sheet. The fact that the paper is held only by electrostatic forces applied over the belt imposes limitations with respect to the accuracy of the color register – acceptable tolerances are usually two to four times higher than with a printing process using conventional technology, such as offset printing. Printing on both sides of a sheet (duplex printing) is also possible with the printing system shown in figure 1.3-28a, in which case the sheet is turned automatically after the front side has been printed and fed back to the printing units. With printing systems of this kind, the content of the print image may be produced in two ways. First, the original can be scanned in with a scanner (that has either been integrated into the printing system or connected via an interface). Secondly, digital data can be used that has either been stored on data carriers or can be fed directly into the production system from a network. The system illustrated in figure 1.3-28 has an integrated flatbed scanner which optically scans and digitizes the print copy. The printing process itself is then carried out. However, with conventional copiers, such
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Imaging
Scanner (scans and digitizes originals) Toner developer unit
Fuser
Delivery
Transfer belt Paper stack (feeder)
a
b
Fig. 1.3-28 NIP printing system (electrophotography) for multicolor printing. a Unit design for multicolor printing (gripperless sheet conveyance) with sheet transfer for duplex printing and scanner; b Printing system with modules for imaging, inking, and fixing (DocuColor 40, Xerox)
Digital imaging signal Lens Polygon mirror
Laser Modulator
Optics
Imaging beam
Mirror
Photoconductor Charge image (invisible) Fig. 1.3-29 Laser imaging system for electrophotography (ROS: Raster Output Scanner)
as those installed in offices for single-color impressions, the copy image is not digitized, but exposed directly onto the photoconductor drum. Printing systems which receive information as analog copy (origi-
nal) are usually referred to as “copiers,” whereas the term “printer” is used if prepared job data is fed directly to the system in digital form. There is a considerable difference between the printing speed of a NIP printing system and the printing speeds of sheet-fed offset presses. The system shown in figure 1.3-28 (relatively fast because of its unit construction) can produce 1200 A3 pages (impressions) an hour, whereas an A3 sheet-fed offset press normally produces between 10000 and 15 000 impressions an hour. This difference in productivity results primarily from the imaging technology used – each impression requires fresh imaging, even if the same image is to be printed. On the one hand, the imaging speed is determined by the different digital hardware and software components (which affect costs accordingly) and, on the other hand, the printing speed is also influenced by the physical processes and design of the ink transfer and paper transport systems. With regard to the precision of modules and components (especially among image systems and cylinder groups), high requirements – like those expected for conventional presses – are absolutely vital. The bearings, for instance, are to be dimensioned similarly in respect to accuracy and resistance. The paper transport must also be supported by high-grade technical systems. Due to a reduced printing speed, the dynamic requirements and loads of such machines are lower – a © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
fact that allows for a lighter construction needing fewer materials. Based on the availability of high-quality technological components, the print quality generated by electrophotographic systems is at a high level. However, it is clearly lower than the high quality that can be achieved with conventional technologies. The qualityrelevant specifications of non-impact printing systems concentrate on addressability data (the number of dots/ pixels per unit of length), number of gray values (or gray levels) per pixel and the toner technology used. The system shown in figure 1.3-28 has an addressability of 400 dpi (dots per inch). When imaging one pixel it can generate different charges by varying the intensity of the imaging light ray (e.g., controlled by means of the ON period of the laser), meaning that it is possible to distinguish about ten gray values through the correspondingly varied toner transfer in the printed pixel. As explained in section 1.4.3 and illustrated in figure 1.4-39, the possible reproduction of very fine structures is determined by the addressability and the possible reproduction of tonal values and gamut by the addressability and the gray values per pixel. The print quality is also affected by the quality of the toner, its particle size, geometric form, and chemical/physical structure. In general, toners with particle sizes of only 6–8 µm and a narrow particle-size distribution are used for high-quality printing so that good image reproducibility is possible. Using powder toners can lead to impaired print quality caused by dusting, that is, portions of the print image that should not carry any ink are inked with “stray” toner particles. The decisive factor and the guarantee for continuous high quality and optimal reproduction throughout a print run using conventional technologies requiring a master is the fact that a stable image carrier is used that represents the print image as a mechanical master (mechanical printing process). In the case of electrophotography (electronic printing process) the constant need for re-imaging can produce system-related fluctuations from print to print. As shown in figure 1.3-26, electrophotographic technologies may operate with powder or liquid toner. The use of liquid toners is still not very widespread, although they essentially have the advantage of assuring higher print quality with considerably smaller toner particles (approx. 1 to 2 µm). (Various toner applications for electrophotographic technologies are explained in detail in section 1.5.2.8, and in chap. 5 – in particular sec. 5.1 and 5.2 –, the device-specific inking © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
unit designs corresponding to these toner applications are shown.) When comparing conventional printing technologies to non-impact printing (especially technologies with a latent intermediate image), it should be noted that in NIP – for instance, with electrophotography – the circumferential length of the photoconductor drum need not be identical to the image length. In many cases the diameters of the drum are smaller than the maximum image length would require, which means that, in order to print a page, the drum has to be imaged over a 360° drum rotation. Therefore, even if the prints are identical, the latent image and the inking by the inking unit do not occur at the same point on the drum surface with every print. Regardless of powder or liquid toner, ink resplitting – such as that occurring (and automatically compensated for) in the sheet-fed offset printing process – is not acceptable in electrophotography. More detailed information on electrophotography and descriptions of system concepts and examples can be found in sections 4.1.4, 4.5.1, 5.1, and 5.2. 1.3.3.2 Ink Jet In principle, ink jet non-impact printing technology does not require an intermediate carrier for the image information the way a photoconductor drum does in electrophotography. In the ink jet process the ink can be transferred directly onto the paper. As illustrated in figure 1.3-26, ink jet technologies can be classified as continuous ink jet and drop on demand ink jet. The ink used for ink jet printing is usually liquid. An alternative, however, is hot-melt inks which are liquefied by heating. The ink is sprayed onto the substrate where it solidifies after cooling. The main ink jet technologies are illustrated in figure 1.3-30, together with typical specifications. The continuous ink jet technology generates a constant stream of small ink droplets, which are charged according to the image and controlled electronically. The charged droplets are deflected by a subsequent electric field, while the uncharged ones flow onto the paper. This means that the imaging signal for charging the droplets corresponds to a negative print image (as was also the case with the example described above for electrophotographic technologies in accordance with figure 1.3-27). Continuous ink jet printing usually feeds only a small proportion of the stream of droplets to the substrate. With continuous ink jet generally only a small part of the drop volume covering
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• Thermal Ink Jet (Bubble Jet) Imaging Charging signal electrode Piezo crystal (approx. 1 MHz)
Nozzle Bubble
Drop deflection (high voltage field) Ink Heat source
Specifications (example): Drop frequency: approx. 5–8 kHz Drop diameter: approx. 35 1m
approx. 60 1m Nozzle Gutter (∆ approx.12 1m)
• Piezo Ink Jet Pump
Paper
Imaging signal Paper
Imaging signal
Paper
Piezo ceramics
Ink
Specifications (example): Drop frequency: approx. 1 MHz Drop diameter: approx. 20 1m Drop speed: approx. 40 m/s
Ink
Specifications (example): Drop frequency: approx. 10–20 kHz Drop diameter: approx. 30 1m a
Nozzle
b
Fig. 1.3-30 Ink jet technologies. a Continuous ink jet; b Drop on demand ink jet
the sheet in accordance with the print information is applied to the substrate. The large part is fed back into the system. With the so-called “drop on demand ink jet” technology, on the other hand, a droplet is only produced if it is required by the image. The most important “drop on demand”technologies are thermal ink jet and piezo ink jet printing (other variants are dealt with in sec. 5.5). Thermal ink jet (also known as “bubble jet”) generates the drops by the heating and localized vaporization of the liquid in a jet chamber. With piezo ink jet the ink drop is formed and catapulted out of the nozzle by mechanically deforming the jet chamber, an action resulting from an electronic signal and the piezoelectric properties of the chamber wall. Due to the technical
conditions, the possible droplet frequencies are lower with thermal droplet generation than with piezo technology. Taking a systematic view, ink jet printing represents the most compact technology for transferring information to normal paper in the form of a printed image (comparable to light on photographic paper). It is only necessary to generate a droplet of ink on the basis of image-dependent signals and to spray this droplet directly onto the substrate without an intermediate carrier. Printing systems based on the ink jet technology are usually slow in comparison to conventional printing technologies with master, that is, they operate at a lower printing speed, especially if imaging is carried out with © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Fig. 1.3-31 Multicolor ink jet printing system (continuous ink jet) for proof production (Digital Cromalin, DuPont)
individual nozzles. Figure 1.3-31 shows an ink jet printing system in which a four-color impression is created by four ink jet systems (one for each of the four inks). To do so, the paper is fastened to a drum and the individual ink jet systems (for the process colors cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) transfer the individual color separations to the substrate. This occurs due to the axial scanning motion of the imaging head and rapid rotation of the drum.With the system shown, an A3 multicolor print is produced in approximately five minutes (addressability 300 dpi, approximately 10 gray values per pixel). This type of system is,therefore,mainly employed to produce the proofs necessary in digital prepress before the computer to plate process (digital, filmless exposure of the printing plate, see sec. 4.3) produces a printing plate. Such a proof allows the quality of the data file and the content and visual quality of the subsequent impression to be checked at a preliminary stage (see also sec. 3.2.11). As previously mentioned, ink jet technologies, which typically operate with a resolution between 300 and 600 dpi, can generate several gray levels per pixel, often depositing several droplets on one pixel. Up to around 30 gray levels are possible with high-frequency continuous ink jet systems. To increase an ink jet printing system’s productivity, nozzle arrays as wide as the printed page have to be used. Figure 1.3-32 illustrates an example of an ink jet system which prints across the whole width of the web © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
with two ink jet heads (240 dpi). Using the system shown, multicolor printing on the upper and lower side of the web is possible. The system shown in this picture, however, is only applying spot color and not the process colors for multicolor halftone printing. Ink-drying presents a particular problem in ink jet printing, and the paper surface’s ability to carry ink deserves special attention. Special coated papers are usually required for high quality impressions, although specially formulated inks used in conjunction with an adapted drying process can greatly increase the range of suitable papers. Hot-melt inks are primarily of interest because they dry rapidly and allow printing on a variety of papers. The NIP technology of ink jet printing, system concepts, and examples are dealt with in more detail in sections 4.5.2, 5.5 and 6.2. 1.3.3.3 Printing Systems based on Non-Impact Printing Technologies Figure 1.3-33 shows in a system architecture that it is possible to set up print media production systems based on non-impact printing technologies. Such systems enable the entire printed product to be produced in-line. With non-impact printing technologies it is of fundamental importance that the print image is already dry after the print (as described for electrophotography with subsequent fixing or ink jet processes using special
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Addressability: 240 dpi Web speed: up to 5 m/s (1000 ft/min) Ink jet imaging array: Width: approx. 108 mm Number of nozzles: 1024 Ink jet imaging: 1 Reverse side printing: e.g., black, page wide 2 Front side printing: e.g., black, page wide 3 Front side: e.g., half page width blue and half page width red 1 3 2
+
+ Unwinding unit a
Rewinding unit
Dryer
b
Fig. 1.3-32 High-speed ink jet printing system (System 6240/Color Runnar, Scitex Digital Printing/Matti Technology)
Fig. 1.3-33 Block structure of an in-line production system for print media
“Product out”
“Data in” Digital system for print media production Color monitor Digitally defined print job Data file (e.g., PostScript)
Raster System Image control Processor Bitmap console (RIP)
Printing system (NIP technology)
Multicolor printed product Finishing
Scanner Prepress
Press
Postpress
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.3 Printing Technologies
Fig. 1.3-34 Print media production system (electrophotography) for in-line brochure production (Digimaster 9110, Heidelberg)
Page to be printed
Originals (layout draft)
Picture
Text
Graphic
Text processing
Layout
Scanning
Image processing
Color separation
Page layout Print sheet imposition
Digital description of the complete print page (or of the print sheet)
Data file (e.g., PostScript format)
Raster image processor & printing system Fig. 1.3-35 Digital composition of a print page
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
drying techniques or using hot-melt ink). In this way, finishing (collating, stitching and folding) can be done in-line, thereby making the intermediate storage of printed sheets superfluous. Figure 1.3-34 illustrates an example of a printing system that delivers a completely finished brochure copy by copy. The printing process is digitally controlled and a data file contains all the text, image, and graphics information to be printed page by page. Additions or modifications of this file are still possible shortly before printing starts, for example via the connected flatbed scanner. This production system could be summed up as a “data in-product out” system. If printing systems based on non-impact technologies are to be used, a full description of the printed product is required in digital form. In a simplified representation, figure 1.3-35 indicates which operations must be carried out in prepress in order to prepare the entire printed page with text, graphics, and illustrations (pictures) in digital form for single or multicolor printing. A detailed description of these processes is given in section 3.2. References in 1.3 [1.3-1] Agte, R.: Zu Definition und Inhalt drucktechnischer Begriffe. VDD-Jahrestagung, 1976, VDMA, Frankfurt/Main. [1.3-2] Wolf, K.: Beitrag zur Systemtheorie der Druckverfahren. Diss. TH Darmstadt 1970. [1.3-3] Walker, W.C.; Fetzko, J.M.: A concept of ink transfer in printing. American Ink Maker 33 (1955), 12.
Further Reading for 1.3 Adams, J.M. et al.: Printing Technology. 4th ed. Delmar Publishers, Albany (NY) 1996. Teschner, H.: Offsetdrucktechnik. 10. Auflage. Fachschriften-Verlag, Fellbach 1997.
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1.4.1 1.4.2 1.4.3 1.4.4 1.4.4.1
1.4.1
Color/Color Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Image Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Halftone Process/Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quality Control/Measurement Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Color Measurement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
68 79 90 99 100
Color/Color Theory
Color is an optical phenomenon, a sensory impression conveyed by the eye and the brain. Color is not a physical variable; accordingly it has no physical unit. An object is not colored per se, but the sensation of color is produced as a result of irradiation by light. Sunlight, which appears to be white, radiates onto an object and is partially reflected. Consequently an object that reflects the red area of the visible spectrum appears colored. An object that reflects completely in the entire visible spectrum usually appears to be white and a completely absorbent body appears to be black. When perceiving and describing colors, physical and physiological effects are always involved. The physical components are measurable, the physiological are not. The physical properties of a color (chromatic stimulus) can be determined with a colorimeter, but how they are interpreted by the human brain (color perception) can only be estimated. Models to describe the measuring instrument “eye” and the perception of color in the brain have been developed by various research groups and organizations, and to date it is the stipulations of the International Commission on Illumination (CIE Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage) that are particularly significant for color description, on the basis of its standard colorimetric observer defined in 1931. The following explanations are not intended to replace a reference book on chromatics or colorimetry, but to give a brief introduction to the topic. It is primarily the properties of colors that are considered and
1.4.4.2 1.4.4.3 1.4.5 1.4.5.1 1.4.5.2
Color Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Measurement of Gloss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Surface Finishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Characteristics of Surface Finishing . . . . . . . Surface Finishing Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . .
108 110 111 111 113
that are of significance in modern reproduction technology. A detailed overview of colorimetry and its application in the printing industry is given, for example, in [1.4-1]. To help in distinguishing the component parts involved in the description of colors via the “eye and brain” as a perception system • the chromatic stimulus is defined as the physically measurable radiation reflected by the observed body and • the color stimulus specification as the result of the visual perception in the eye of the observer. Since it cannot be assumed that the brain operates merely as a color stimulus specification “display unit,” it is also expedient to define color perception as the sensory impression triggered by the color in the brain. A color measuring instrument (colorimeter, spectrophotometer) primarily measures only the chromatic stimulus, from which the color stimulus specification and possibly also the color perception can then be deduced numerically by means of suitable interpretation models. These may, for example, be the standard color spaces defined by the CIE: CIELAB, and CIELUV. Color plays an important role in printing and reproduction technology as a descriptive variable for the actual reproduction. A basic knowledge of colorimetry on the part of the user is necessary especially since printing quality monitoring has been carried out on the basis of colorimetry color measure© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
ment (sec. 2.1.4.2) and the introduction of color management systems (see sec. 3.2.10). A color often appears to the human observer in a colored environment. Color perceptions can only be described clearly by means of comparisons and contrasts. Thus, for example, an identical neutral gray tone field appears greenish on a red background and rather reddish on a green background (fig. 1.4-1). This effect, known as simultaneous contrast, and similar perceptive effects can be directly transferred as influencing factors in reproduction technology. Although the practitioner seldom knows the systematic correlations of chromatics, he takes the correct action intuitively and will always reproduce a color image so that, for example, it appears neutral with a certain specified background, even though the colorimeter might indicate a clear color cast. It must be stressed that as a rule the human eye is an excellent instrument for comparing colors, but is virtually unable to give absolute descriptions of the appearance of colors. Therefore, the aim of color theory in the field of reproduction technology can be clearly formulated: Whatever is used in the way of technical aids or color classification systems must be aligned with the color perception of the “ultimate measuring instrument,”the eye of the human observer (a model on color perception, in accordance with [1.4-2] is shown in fig. 1.4-14, and the range in the spectrum of electromagnetic waves visible to the human eye is illustrated in fig. 1.4.-15). Both additive and subtractive color mixing processes occur in modern color reproduction technology. The building up of luminosity by means of the individual colors involved is known as additive color mixture (fig. 1.4-2). With subtractive color mixing, on the other hand, luminosity is suppressed by the addition of individual colors (fig. 1.4-3). The classification method of additive or subtractive color mixing systems is not produced, as is frequently assumed, as a result of the colorfulness of its individual components (e.g., additive color mixing like RGB or subtractive color mixture like CMYK), but solely as a result of the light-increasing or light-reducing effect of the mixing processes. In other words, with additive color mixing the same points of the retina receive the rays emitted by several colors in the eye simultaneously. The color impressions add up; with, subtractive color mixing no actual color mixing occurs, but the spectral effects of the individual colors/layers of ink are mounted successively, in a comparable way to superimposed optical glass filters with which the spectral transmission characteristics are combined. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 1.4-1 Simultaneous contrast. Example of the visual perception of a color shift in an identical gray tone as a result of the surrounding colors
Fig. 1.4-2 Additive color mixing of the basic colors red, green, blue
Fig. 1.4-3 Subtractive color mixing of the basic colors cyan, magenta, yellow
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Purely additive or purely subtractive reproduction processes are rarely found in color reproduction technology. In multicolor halftone printing, for example, both additive and subtractive color mixing occur (see fig. 1.4-18). Only when colors are presented on a monitor can virtually ideal additive color mixing be observed, virtually ideal subtractive color mixing can be observed with the superimposition of different transparent colored substrates (e.g., optical filters, colored transparencies). In practice the term color temperature is often used to describe the basic setting of a monitor. Of significance with respect to the derivation of this term is the fact that with many artificial sources of radiation, the visible radiation is obtained as a result of the heating up of a material (e.g., a glowing metal filament in an electric light bulb). With these thermal radiators, the radiated energy and its spectral distribution depends on their temperature and absorption properties. Generally valid is the fact that the greater the degree to which a body absorbs visible radiation, the greater is its radiated energy at a specified temperature. In theory it is an “ideal black body”that has the greatest radiation energy, which can, in turn, be calculated as a function of temperature. This theoretical black body, also referred to as the Planckian radiator, is in practice often taken as a comparison variable for color temperatures, because there are in fact some light sources with radiation distribution behavior very similar to that of the black body. The temperature of the Planckian body at which colors are most similar is called the color temperature or the most similar color temperature. The radiation distribution of the ideal black body is shown in figure 1.4-4. It can be seen that not only does the radiated energy in total increase with the temperature, but its spectral distribution (i.e.,“colorfulness”) changes, too. Attempts are often made to describe the color stimulus specification of a light source using the convenient datum of a single number, namely the color temperature expressed in degrees Kelvin. It is generally true that low color temperatures, with a monitor, for example, correspond to a reddish-yellowish (perceptibly warmer) color and high color temperatures tend to appear bluish (perceptibly colder). Of course, the color temperature datum is no substitute for the exact description of a color stimulus specification, but it is in fact a tried and tested, rough model for describing the properties of light sources and primary light sources. It is also true that only a relatively small number of colors can be specified using color temperature.
Relative radiation energy 150 125 100 75 50 25 0 380 420 460 500 540 580 620 660 700 740 780 2000 K 4000 K 6000 K
Wavelength [nm]
Fig. 1.4-4 Radiation distribution of the ideal black body (Planckian radiator) as a function of temperature (K: absolute temperature in Kelvin)
In order to facilitate a more accurate description of light sources so-called standard illuminants were introduced by the CIE. The starting point was the relatively constant electric light bulb, its radiation distribution being standardized as standard illuminant A. A spectral distribution characteristic of daylight, standard illuminant C (artificial daylight), can be obtained from this illuminant using a standardized filter. Because the light of an electric light bulb contains very little ultraviolet radiation, an attribute of the artificial daylight of standard illuminant C is also that only low proportions of UV light (UV= ultraviolet) occur. However, since exactly this proportion of UV plays a significant role in many actual color matching processes (particularly in the printing industry), with D65 the CIE defined an additional standard illuminant (natural daylight), the number 65 signifying in this case that the color temperature is 6500 Kelvin. Since the CIE’s standard illuminant D65 has only been specified in theory, it is in fact very difficult to simulate it using actual light media in practice. In printing and reproduction technology another standard illuminant, D50 (5000 Kelvin), is also used, which is intended to describe approximately natural daylight. As already mentioned, the color temperature datum is not an exact procedure for describing colors. To facilitate a more precise and internationally uniform de© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
scription, a system of recognized reference colors, which are also known as reference color stimuli, is expedient. In 1931 the CIE specified the color matching functions of the reference color stimuli R, G, and B in accordance with the empirically determined properties of the standard observer. In this system a combination of reference color stimuli is assigned to every wavelength of the visible spectrum. It includes both positive and negative values for reference color stimuli. To obtain only positive values a system of virtual reference color stimuli was specified by the CIE, designated by the letters X, Y, and Z, with X corresponding to an imaginary (not actually existing) red, Y to an imaginary green, and Z to an imaginary blue color stimulus specification. The spectral values relating to these standard colorimetry specifications are called standard tristimulus values and the color values calculated from them the standard color values. The standard color matching functions –x(l), –y(l) and –z(l) describe the relative energy radiated over the wavelength and define the spectral sensitivity of the eye of the CIE standard colorimetry observer (fig. 1.4-5 and fig. 1.4.-14). Certain particular attributes can be derived from the standard tristimulus values specified by the CIE, with an ideal white (under ideal illumination with a spectrum of the same energy and irrespective of wavelength) having the standard tristimulus values X = Y = Z = 100, it being possible to calculate luminance using the imaginary tristimulus value Y.
Relative radiation energy 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 400
450
500
550
600
650 700 Wavelength [nm]
x (λ) y (λ) z (λ) Fig. 1.4-5 Standard color matching functions © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
The CIEXYZ color system represents an important reference color space in modern reproduction technology. Both the stipulations of the International Color Consortiums (ICC) [1.4-3] and the color definitions of the page description language PostScript [1.4-4] make provision for CIEXYZ as a reference color space under standard illuminant D50, at an observation angle of 2 degrees. In representing the interrelationship of standard color values, reference is made to the standard color value ratios x, y, and z, which when added together always give 1. Accordingly it is not necessary to list all three values, any two values in relation to 1 suffice as an unambiguous value description. The application of this system produces a new representational variant for the unambiguous classification of colors on the basis of the CIE reference color stimuli. Only the standard color value ratios x and y, which constitute a measurement of saturation and hue, are given instead of the standard color values X,Y, and Z. Also, luminance is described by the additional datum of standard color value Y in the third dimension. The representation derived from this is also known as the standard color chart, the CIE color triangle or in practitioner’s terms as the “CIE footprint.” Marking the actual color stimulus specifications in this visualization diagram (remembering that X, Y, and Z are imaginary and not real reference color stimuli), produces the horseshoe-shaped space illustrated in figure 1.4-6, the outer edge of which is also known as the spectrum locus. The so-called basic stimulus with the standard color value ratios x = y = 0.333 corresponds to the achromatic point in the CIE color triangle. The color stimulus specification of the respective light source used is taken as the basic stimulus for surface colors. In the case of standard illuminant D65, for example, the standard color value ratios are x = 0.313 and y = 0.329. If graphic visualization of the luminance is sought, in addition to saturation and hue, another representational axis must be introduced. The Y axis traversed by the achromatic point completes the CIE color triangle for the CIE color solid (fig. 1.4-7). If the maximum attainable luminance is applied to the surface colors in addition to saturation and hue, the CIE color solid has the appearance of an asymmetrical mountain. It must be noted that a markedly greater luminance can be achieved with high saturation in the yellow and green color range than in the blue and red color range. Therefore the CIE color solid is clearly asymmetrical.
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Fig. 1.4-6 CIE (x, y, Y) chromaticity diagram (CIE color space, CIE color “triangle”) [1.4-1]
y 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
Fig. 1.4-7 CIE color solid [1.4-8]
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8 x
Y
100 80 60
y
0.8
40 0.6 20
EE
0.4
0.8 x 0.2 0.0 0.0
The CIE color solid in figure 1.4-7 expediently describes all pigment colors that can be perceived by the eye of the normal observer with a specified light source, though the visual difference between two colors cannot be read suitably in this classification scheme.
0 0.2
0.6 0.4
E: achromatic point
The numerical value for the difference between two colors in a color classification system is usually indicated by Delta E (DE). This value per se merely represents a statement of the difference, whereby the classification system and distance formulae with which the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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color difference is determined are of fundamental importance. As a general rule, the lower the DE value, the lower the color difference. If, for example, the Euclidean difference of two X, Y, Z values (vectors, value triad) is determined by means of a simple difference formula e = DX 2 + DY 2 + DZ 2
(with X, Y, and Z as the coordinates of a three-dimensional coordinate system), it becomes apparent that this numerical value does not agree with the perceived difference between other pairs of colors. It is for this reason that various attempts have been made to define color classification systems that are better able to meet the criterion of visual uniformity. To solve the problem, on the one hand, as simple as possible a mathematical transformation of XYZ into a new color system, possibly disregarding the ideal visual uniformity criterion, can be used (functional approach). On the other hand, an individual color classification system can be created by drawing up a complex reference system, in which transformation into all individ-
ual values is specified that is consistent with the ideal visual equidistance criterion (in table or Look-UpTable form). The “Munsell Book of Colors”(1915) probably represents the most famous table approach, but this will not be dealt with in greater detail at this point. Another option consists of an initial improvement of the uniformity criterion being achieved by means of a simple functional approach by introducing a new color system and then obtaining a sufficiently good description of differences using a modified difference formula (e.g., CIE94). If the CIE color triangle is now transformed (i.e., the chroma specified by x and y) by distortion so that an initial visual uniformity criterion (compensating for the so-called Mac Adams Ellipses) is achieved, the basis of the CIELUV color space (fig. 1.4-8) is produced. This transformation is implemented using linear equations, so that the conversion into u' and v' remains simple, but the criterion of visual uniformity is met only moderately well. The luminance value Y must then be incorporated into the transformation. This finally produces with
v´ 0.7
0.6
0.5 Color values and transformations:
0.4
L* = 116 (Y/Yn )1/3 –16 u* = 13 L* (u´ – u´n )
0.3
v* = 13 L* (v´ – v´n )
+
4X X +15Y + 3Z 4x = –2x +12y+ 3
u´ =
0.2
0.1
9Y X +15Y + 3Z 9y = –2x +12y+ 3
v´ = 0.0 0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
Fig. 1.4-8 CIELUV color space [1.4-1] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
u´
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L*,u*,v* a value triad for the complete description of color coordinates in the CIELUV color solid in accordance with the equations listed in figure 1.4-8. The difference between two colors in the CIELUV system is determined by means of the Euclidean difference formula DE = DL*2 + Du*2 + Dv *2 . Differences on the axes or in the levels of the threedimensional color classification system can, of course, be determined separately (e.g., DEuv, DEu, DEv, DEL). Other ideas for creating equidistant color classification systems and difference formulae have been developed independently of the CIE color triangle classification system using the “complementary color theory” [1.4-5, p. 38]. Probably the most popular and currently the most important color space based on the complementary color theory is known as CIELAB (fig. 1.4-11). The LAB color difference formula defined by the CIE in 1976 was primarily useful for standardizing the different LAB models that had already been developed over the years.
The L*, a*, and b* coordinates can be calculated from the standard color values XYZ, as illustrated in figure 1.4-9. Under the CIELAB color space derivation system, there are no two-dimensional color charts (like the CIE color triangle), in which hue and saturation can be represented. The CIELAB color solid is shown in figure 1.4-10 and the cross section for a certain lightness value, the CIELAB color space, is shown in figure 1.4-11. In the CIELAB color circle ( fig. 1.4-9) the chroma and not the saturation is varied as a parameter from the center to the edge of the circle. This means that no meaningful representation of the spectrum locus outline is possible in the CIE color circle (unlike the u’,v’ diagram or the CIE color triangle). The popular representational form LCH is produced from the CIELAB color circle by means of a simple variation. In it chroma C* and hue h* are determined from the values a* and b* in accordance with figure 1.4-9 and figure 1.4-12. In figure 1.4-12 the color locations for a blue and green tone have also been entered in accordance with fig. 1.4-13. Calculation was done on the basis of the spectral distributions corresponding to the colors, as il-
Yellow +b* +80
+60
L* = 116 (Y/Y n ) 1/3 –16
C*
+40
a* = 500 [(X/X n ) 1/3 – (Y/Yn) 1/3] +20
–a* Green
—80
—60
—40
h* +20
—20
+40
b* = 200 [(Y/Y n ) 1/3 – (Z/Zn ) 1/3] +60
+80
+a* Red Chromatic value:
—20
C*ab = [a* 2 + b*2 ] 1/2 —40
Hue angle: —60
h*ab = arctan (b*/a*)
—80
–b* Blue Fig. 1.4-9 CIELAB color circle [1.4-1] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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Fig. 1.4-10 CIELAB color solid [1.4-2]
Fig. 1.4-11 CIELAB color space (cross section of the color solid) [1.4-1]
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
lustrated in figure 1.4-13. These spectral distributions represent the physical “fingerprint” of the colors, from which perception-relevant color coordinates can be calculated by means of colorimetry. When colorimetrically controlled reproduction systems (color management) are used, it is considerably easier for the inexperienced user to describe and edit the LAB data represented in LCH form. Nowadays, therefore, there is a preference for data to be saved as LAB data and edited in LCH mode. Figure 1.4-14 shows in summary how human perception of color takes place and how the physical model for the metrological recording and “correct” mathematical description with respect to perception is structured, reference also being made to different color systems. To sum up, it should be noted that no ideal equidistant color classification system exists to date. It has been attempted in numerous investigations to present the fundamental advantages of CIELAB over CIELUV and vice versa. Subject to a certain “de facto” standardization, conditioned among other things by the stipulations of the International Color Consortium (ICC), the CIELAB color space probably represents the most important colorimetric classification system at present. Visual uniformity of color differences was optimized further by the introduction of a new color difference formula CIE94, which is based on the parameters of the LCH representational variant of the CIELAB color space [1.4-6].
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b*
L* 100
Quadrant II
Quadrant I +80
90
+60
80
+40
C*
70
+20
60
h* -a*
—80
—60
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C* = a*2 + b*2 b*
Quadrant IV -b*
A
0
h* = arctan ( a* ) DEab = Da*2 + Db*2
Fig. 1.4-12 CIELAB color circle with chromatic value C* and hue angle h* (color locations and in accordance with fig. 1.4-13) [1.4-2] (Note: The colors in fig. 1.4-12 and fig. 1.4-13 may not be rendered accurately, they should only illustrate the problem in general)
It is primarily the inclusion of color perception effects (e.g., simultaneous contrasts) in the systematic description of colors that represents an actual subject of scientific color research. An attempt is made in socalled color appearance models to produce a systematic relationship between color stimulus specification and color perception. A comprehensive summary of the status of discussions is given in [1.4-7]. A special form of color classification systems may be mentioned briefly at this point: Color sample catalogs such as Pantone, HKS, or RAL do not serve as a systematic description of all colors that can be perceived by the normal observer. In these cases, a collection of individual colors is merely compiled, which are used for a visual comparison of colors. A certain Pantone color is, for example, supplied by the manufacturer on the specified substrate of a reference chart, to enable the same color stimulus specifi-
cation to be copied using a color system appropriate to the output device whereby it could easily be possible that the Pantone reference value cannot be matched in the actual CMYK color space of a printing system. The best approximating solution is usually determined empirically by color mixture trials or by means of a color management system. Spectral measuring instruments (spectrophotometers) and tristimulus color measuring instruments (colorimeter) are mostly used for color measurement (see also sec. 1.4-4 and figs. 1.4-48–1.4-50). Colors cannot be measured using a densitometer (fig. 1.4-17). This can be explained using the example of the two colors, blue and green, in figure 1.4-13. When measurements are taken using a color filter which produces the maximum measured value, a densitometer gives the same optical density of D = 1.38 for both colors; the measurement based on colorimetry, on the other hand, produces a © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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D = 1.38
D = 1.38
A
B ∆Eab = 39
100%
0% 300
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600
700 nm
Fig. 1.4-13 Spectral intensity distribution as a “fingerprint” on the example of two colors and (at the same optical density) [1.4-2] (Note: The colors in fig. 1.4-12 and fig. 1.4-13 may not be rendered accurately, they should only illustrate the problem in general)
color difference of DEab = 39, which realistically reproduces the very great difference between the two colors “blue” and “green.” Figure 1.4-12 also indicates the location of the two colors in the CIELAB color circle. The color vision model and the colorimetric measuring system in accordance with fig. 1.4-14 basically encompasses the two colorimetric techniques described below, spectrometric and tristimulus measurement procedures. The difference lies fundamentally in the fact that with the spectrophotometer the intensity spectrum of the color is processed by means of digital filtration using the standard color matching function, whereas with the tristimulus measurement technique filtration is done using optical filters, which have been adapted to the spectral progression of the standard color matching function [1.4-8]. The spectrophotometer is based on the principle that any color can be described as an additive mixture of spectral colors. The visible spectrum to be recorded © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
(fig. 1.4-15) is broken down into small intervals and the light intensity in each wavelength interval is measured individually (see also fig. 1.4-50). Most spectrophotometers in general use operate at 10 or 20 nm intervals, so that as much as thirty or more individual light intensities can be determined over the visible range of the spectrum (visible range: 380–730 nm). For special investigations and with technically more sophisticated systems, it is also possible to measure markedly smaller intervals (of up to 1nm). The spectral intensity data are usually then processed using a mathematical simulation of the three receptors of the CIE standard observer under a specified illuminant and at a specified observation angle. The thirtychannel signal, for example, can be reduced for colorimetric analysis to the defined parameters X, Y, and Z of the CIEXYZ system in this way, and converted from this to other color systems (fig. 1.4-14). The software of a spectral color measuring instrument will typically allow for the direct conversion of the spectral data into the currently relevant color systems, taking the equations of the respective standardization group (e.g., the CIE) into account. The illuminant, among other things, is taken directly into consideration as a parameter in the reduction of spectral data to CIE color systems, so that subsequent conversions to other illumination conditions (e.g., from D50 to D65 or vice versa) are then quite impossible or at best only possible using mathematical approximations. The basic concept underlying the tristimulus color measurement procedure is that CIE definitions offer a good description of the spectral sensitivity of the three color receptors in the eye. Accordingly, it is also possible to measure colors by means of three sensors, the spectral sensitivity of which resembles that of the eye receptors. Similarly, it is possible to conceive of three color filters, which with a sensor that is ideal over the entire spectrum and with perfect illumination corresponds in transparency to the respective standard tristimulus value curves (figs. 1.4-49, 1.4-5). Therefore the tristimulus color measurement procedure seems particularly attractive because only three measured values must be determined and these values can be immediately converted into CIE standard color values. In practice there have hitherto been problems in developing color filters that correspond to the precise characteristics of the respective standard tristimulus value curves. Details of the instrument’s structure are given in [1.4-2].
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Object
Illumination S (l) color stimulus function [j(l)]
Color perception (qualitative)
Brain
j(l) = Radiation ¥ Radiation reflectance function [S(l)] [b (l)]
{
Lightness, hue, saturation
Eye
CIE color matching function b (l)
Optics
j (l)
x
l
y
l
z
l
Observer model
k◊6
k◊6 k◊
Tristimulus value
X
Color values Y
Y x y ,
Color space transformation
L* a* b*
,
L* C* h*
Z 6
Color specification (quantitative)
Measurement equipment
{
Lightness, chromaticity coordinates
Fig. 1.4-14 Block diagram/model for color perception and the colorimetric description of colors ([1.4.2])
The spectral radiation distribution of the light source used is also a particularly critical parameter because it should be consistent with the specified standard illuminant. Thus tristimulus color measuring instruments are only really perfect if all conditions in the instrument (illumination, color filter, sensor, image geometry) meet the standardized measuring conditions ideally. Only then will the simplification criteria of the direct derivation of CIE standard color values be perfectly valid. In the interests of completeness in further explaining the properties of a tristimulus color measuring instrument it must be mentioned that the color values resulting from measurement are, of course, only valid under the specified basic conditions (illuminant, observation angle, usually D50 at 2 degrees). Only the integral of light intensity over the spectrum is determined here. With the spectrophotometer, on the other hand, light intensity is determined at small intervals and can consequently be converted in relation to other basic conditions in accordance with CIE stipulations. CIE coordinates for different illuminants and observa-
tion angles can only be calculated from the spectral measurement data of a spectrophotometer. In practice, there are other advantages in using spectrophotometers which arise from the fact that certain, partially disruptive color effects (e.g., metamerism – two colors may appear identical under one and different under another illuminant; fluorescence – colors may show special radiation effects depending on the illumination) or inadequacy of the measuring optics may frequently be detected from the spectral measurement data. They can then be eliminated in corresponding compensation calculations prior to translation into CIE standard color values. Optical density can also be calculated using spectrophotometers; in this case the progression of the optical filters (blue, green, yellow, visual filters) as they are used in densitometers is reproduced digitally. In terms of a simple comparison, it can be said that a tristimulus color measuring instrument is more suitable for determining color differences than for absolute color measurement. In practice a spectrophotometer is © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Fig. 1.4-15 Visible range in the spectrum of electromagnetic waves [1.4.-8]
X-ray Gamma
UV
IR microwave
Radio Radar TV Radio waves UKWKW MW LW
1 pm
1 nm
1 1m
1 mm
1m
1 km Wavelength
Visible light
400
always to be recommended for precise and more flexible color measurement.
1.4.2
Color Image Composition
Color Reproduction In general terms, printing technology color reproduction is the conversion of a scene or object so that it remains as faithful as possible to the original in order to present it in a printed product via an information transfer chain. In many cases a photograph (bromide or transparency/positive film) is used as the intermediate carrier. The photograph plays its part in the overall reproduction process, as do possible image manipulations, the screen process, materials, transfer characteristics, and many other parameters. What constitutes an “ideal color reproduction” and by what criteria can quality in reproduction technology be measured? The quality characteristics of modern reproduction technology are dependent firstly and decisively on the reproduction intention, that is, on the customer’s expectations. For example, in the production of adver© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
500
600
700
nm
tisements in newspapers and periodicals, the general rule applies that a printed advertisement should conform as closely as possible to the artwork submitted to the publisher by the advertising agency. The term faithful reproduction can be used here. [1.4-1] describes in a particularly succinct form that faithful reproduction can even produce “spectrally identical” results, though this can rarely be achieved in practice. In this case it would be ensured that the reproduction looked the same as the original under all lighting conditions. This requirement is especially important in the adaptation of proofs for printing. In contrast to faithful reproduction, in the editorial section of newspapers and periodicals the aim that is frequently pursued is the reproduction of the original images so that they are attractive. The terms appeal or intention-optimizing reproduction can be used here. In this sense the term appeal-optimizing can be interpreted in various ways. The transparencies supplied by photographic agencies often have a considerably larger color gamut than the printing technology utilized, so that compromises have to be made during the conversion of the image information into print (fig. 1.4-16).
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0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5
C+Y Y
0.4 0.3
C
M+Y
c M
b
0.2
a
0.1 0.0 0.0
C+M
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
Fig. 1.4-16 Color gamuts in the CIELAB system for different reproduction processes. a Color photograph (diapositive); b High-quality offset printing; c Newspaper printing
The scanner operator decides, after consultation with the customer when necessary, where specific image information (e.g., a drawing) is to be obtained, what is to be omitted and even, if need be, what image content is to be emphasized. Quite major compromises have to made during reproduction for newspaper printing, because in this case there is, on the one hand, a very small color gamut available and, on the other, image data is often supplied (by press agencies, for example) in an inadequately specified color space (more often than not in an undefined RGB). In this example, “attractive images” have to be deliberately created from the unknown color data, the optimization criteria being largely subjective. With intention-optimizing/faithful reproduction it should be ensured that a company’s products displayed in catalogs and advertisements correspond accurately to the manufacturer’s color specifications. To comply with the guidelines of corporate design, visual matching with color samples from special catalogues (e.g., Pantone, HKS) is often undertaken. If, for example, a
company’s corporate color (special color) cannot be mixed sufficiently satisfactorily from the primary colors, an additional color is added, which is also known as a spot color. Spot colors are normally not taken into account in the color separation of image data, but are used solely to create individual elements. In the case of faithful color reproduction, automatic processes can now be used to a great extent (“Color Management,” see sec. 3.2.10 in particular). In the case of appeal-optimizing reproduction technology, manual intervention by trained image processing specialists is largely unavoidable. Automatic image analysis and optimization methods have only been under development for a few years and have not yet, as a rule, replaced manual image manipulation. The other factors that determine the quality of a color reproduction depend primarily on the characteristic properties of the ink, the substrate, the printing technology utilized, the printing conditions, the nature of the original, and the separation parameters. The colorimetric properties of the ink utilized and of the substrate have a considerable influence on the reproducible color gamut. For example, it is of importance what magenta pigment is used in the ink. The relatively expensive rhodamin magenta extends the color space, especially in the blue and purple range. The substrate, too, is a major factor in determining the attainable full-tone density, therefore it also affects the reproducible color contrast. Typical full-tone density is around 1.5 density units for uncoated paper when overprinting primary colors and around 2.0 density units for coated papers. A brief explanation of densitometry is given in figure 1.4-17 to supplement the comments on color measurement in section 1.4.1, where the use of spectral measuring techniques based on colorimetrics is explained. In essence, an ink film thickness measurement is being taken here on the basis of the optical absorption of light for a known ink hue using optimal filters to achieve the highest possible measured value and therefore high measuring sensitivity. Another factor that affects reproduction quality is the nature and definition of the halftone process used. The screen ruling for conventional, amplitude-modulated screens depends on the smallest, safely transferable dot structure (around 10–20 µm in offset printing), which is why detail resolution is noticeably better in offset printing than in other printing technologies, such as flexographic or screen printing. Typical screen ruling for high-quality multicolor printing is around © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Fig. 1.4-17 Measurement of color density (optical density) by densitometry (measurement method)
Illumination
Display Electronics & computer
Detector Analyzer Optics D
Polarizer l
Optics
Color filter l0
Aperture
Paper
Sample
60-80 lines per cm (dot spacing, around 125–167 µm), though this screen definition is only the optimal choice where there is a “typical” observer distance of about 25–30 cm (approx. one foot). (Large picture posters are reproduced with noticeably coarse screens, because they are usually observed from a greater distance.) If the color of an object such as a car is to be reproduced, the lighting of the object during exposure, possible reflections, contrasts, and the color temperature of the light source will naturally have an effect on the overall reproduction. In this case the photograph merely serves as the intermediate information carrier for the overall reproduction task. As a result of the introduction of digital camera technology (cf. sec. 3.2.3) in conjunction with digital printing systems (e.g., NIP systems) it is now possible to have a completely digital reproduction chain, extending from the exposure of the original to the printed reproduction. A major factor that affects the quality of the color reproduction is the actual color break-up or color separation. It must be stressed here that multicolor printing is predominantly a trichromatic reproduction process, that is all colors are mixed from three base colors. Even if in practice the fourth “color,” black, is added, this does not change the fact that color information for a printed reproduction can generally be composed from three base or primary colors. It is of fundamental importance that the filters used for the color break-up carried out during the production of color separations be specially adapted to the inks, in order to achieve the most faithful printed reproduction. If this adaptation © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2 1
s 1 2 3 [1m] Ink film thickness s
Ink
Reflectance: β =
Optical density
l l0
Density: D = log
1 b
is not optimal, additional color transformations will be required (Color Management, cf. sec. 3.2.10). Color Separation Color separation for color image composition is based on a subtractive color mixing process, though color image composition in printing essentially involves socalled autotypical color synthesis. In multicolor printing the halftone dots are to some extent isolated alongside each other, but they are also overprinted; both subtractive color mixing (overprinting of the halftone dot areas by single colors) and additive color mixing (integration of the single colors of isolated halftone dots by the eye of the observer) take place on the printed page. In figure 1.4-18a this is shown for three-color overprinting. In figure 1.4-19 the color separations are shown together with overprints done on a four-color offset press. Suitably small, directly adjacent raster dots create a similar additive color synthesis effect to the dot-shaped induced phosphorous coatings in a color monitor (in printing, on the other hand, the halftone dots/color areas are illuminated and the remitted/reflected light reaches the eye of the observer, where the corresponding color stimuli are added). The ink films applied to the substrate in the printing process have to be transparent, that is, act like color filters, for the physical principles of subtractive color mixing to take effect. Exclusively subtractive color composition occurs when overprinting fairly large color areas. If there is only subtractive color mixing, the brightness of the
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a
b Fig. 1.4-18 Autotypical multicolor printing (microscopic photo of a print image section); scale: cell spacing about 167 µm. a Image detail with homogeneous color (3-color print); b Image detail with structured color (4-color print)
mixed color decreases with the thickness of the ink layer. In screened reproduction processes for multicolor printing the screen structure and the color register adjustment for overprinting inevitably produce a complicated, variable combination of subtractive and additive color mixing. This results in significant demands on the spectral properties of the inks. Both with color mixing through screen dots located next to one another on the substrate (additive), as well as with screen dots above one another (subtractive), the mixing color should be perceived by the observer as the same color. This requirement on the ideal base colors can only be met if they have rectangular spectral distributions. In addition the discontinuity values must be between zero and one, and there may be no more than two discontinuities (special effects in halftone printing such as
light gathering [1.4-9] are not considered here). An additional factor is that it would be necessary to adapt these discontinuities in the spectral distribution of the three primary colors ideally to each other. Furthermore, the discontinuities have to be selected so that as large as possible a range of color is produced for the resultant color solid. Various tests have shown that the first ideal discontinuity would have to be between 489 nm and 495 nm and the second between 574 nm and 575 nm; the corresponding spectral distributions are shown in figure 1.4-20. The base colors resulting from these requirements are also referred to as “optimal colors” [1.4-1]. It would be really easy to calculate color reproduction using optimal colors. Magenta, cyan, and yellow are used as the inks and red, green, and blue are produced as the subtractive mixed colors of the first order. If the color locations of the optimal base colors and their first order subtractive mixed colors are entered in the u’v’ diagram, it can be seen that the primary colors lie exactly on the connecting line between the mixed colors. The achromatic point (E) is produced by linking up the opposite primary and mixed colors. An ideal neutral gray is produced by mixing the same proportions of primary colors. The color gamut is characterized by the location and size of the triangle in the u’v’ diagram (fig. 1.4-21). In contrast to figure 1.4-16, in this case the projection takes place in the u’v’ system instead of the x,y coordinate system. (As explained in sec. 1.4.1, the projections are equivalent.) In this optimal-color scenario, converting RGB and CMY data into each other becomes virtually a minor operation. The color conversion procedures of the first generation in PostScript [1.4-4] page description language were also selected in accordance with this simple model for the spectral distribution of colors: Cyan = 1.0–Red, Magenta = 1.0–Green, Yellow = 1.0–Blue. It is known that in subtractive color mixing the color “black”(letter symbol “K”for “Key Color”) is produced by the superimposition or the overprinting of the colors red (R), green (G), blue (B) or cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y). PostScript’s architects had assumed that a combination of the same proportions of the three primary colors would produce an ideal neutral gray and that consequently the largest possible proportion of black in the color separation could be calculated from the largest common proportion of pri© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Fig. 1.4-19 Color separations and overprinting for reproduction in four-color offset printing C
M
C+M
Y
C+M+Y
K
C+M+Y+K
Reflection %
380 Short wavelength color ( cyan)
575 Wavelength (nm)
380
495
Long wavelength color
720 ( yellow)
495
575
Color with lower and ( magenta) higher wavelength present
Fig. 1.4-20 Spectral distribution (relative spectral reflections) for “ideal colors”
mary colors [1.4-4]. These assumptions were so far removed from actual practice that during activation of the first generation of PostScript color printing systems unsatisfactory color print results appeared; this was rectified in later versions. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
As with the selection of the ideal primary colors, the ideal color separation filters in reproduction systems would also have to be coordinated with the optimal base colors. This requirement would at least apply for analog, camera-based reproduction technology, for which no
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v' 0.7 0.6 G Y
0.5
E
C
0.4
R
M 0.3 0.2 B
0.1 0 0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7 u'
Fig. 1.4-21 Color locations of primary colors (ideal colors in accordance with fig. 1.4-20) and their mixed colors in subtractive color synthesis (“ideal multicolor printing”) [1.4-1]
other comprehensive color transformation (via a color management system) is possible. However, since the assumption of ideal base colors cannot be implemented in practice, theoretical consideration of ideal color separations filters will be dispensed with at this point. In reality, the inks used in actual printing are merely imperfect approximations of the optimal colors. In
Reflection %
Cyan
Reflection %
figure 1.4-22, typical spectral distributions of real primary colors in multicolor printing are illustrated together with the discontinuities of the “optimal colors.” It can be seen that the real primary colors do not reflect and/or absorb in the ideal section of the spectrum and that a number of unwanted spectral side effects also occur. It follows from this that the color gamut theoretically possible in printing is not being achieved. Moreover, additive color mixing in printing does not produce the same color impression as subtractive color mixing within color areas, which leads to deviations in the autotypical (screened) image composition. It is a fact that no neutral gray can be created from the same proportions of primary colors (in the color separations) and RGB values cannot be transferred to CMY data merely by “inverting.” It has become apparent in practice that a certain combination of unequal proportions of primary colors will produce a neutral gray in standardized offset printing (e.g., tone values for color separations/films for a relatively dark gray value in offset printing: cyan 70%, magenta 60%, yellow 60%; or for a lighter gray value: cyan 24%, magenta 18%, yellow 18%). Such data takes into account the specific colorimetric properties of real primary colors for printing and is useful as a process control tool for specifically determining the gray balance (see fig. 1.4-42). However, it cannot be transferred directly to other color scales and printing processes, which would be perfectly possible with ideal inks. To sum up,the following requirements can be imposed on the ideal set of primary colors for printing [1.4-1]:
Magenta
Reflection %
Yellow
100
0 380
495 575 Wavelength
nm
720 380
495 575 Wavelength
nm
720 380
495 575 Wavelength
nm
720
Fig. 1.4-22 Spectral distribution (degree of spectral reflection) of printing inks for multicolor printing [1.4-1] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
• The spectral remission (reflectance) and/or absorption properties of the primary colors should be as close as possible to those of the optimal colors. • The color locations of the primary colors should be selected in such a way that they produce as large a color gamut as possible. • Equal proportions of primary colors should produce an achromatic tone with additive and subtractive color mixing in printing that is as close as possible to gray (on ideal white substrate). • The resultant mixed colors of the first order (secondary colors) should, as far as possible, be in the middle between the primary colors in the color circle/color space. Reproduction Process Coordination of the process stages and the materials is also of central importance in color reproduction, as well as selection of the ideal base colors and color separation filters. Turning a real scene into a printed product via a photograph involves a multistage information transfer chain. The interfaces and parameters of this chain can usually be controlled by purposeful interventions on the part of the operator. If some image transformation/reproduction properties are, in practice, unchangeable (static), because of machine constants, for example, the other manipulable links in the transfer chain have to be adjusted to the static properties. Consequently, for example, as indicated above only certain real pigments can be used in printing inks, but their spectral properties are very different from those of the optimal colors. Therefore, when they are used for color separation to produce separation films (also sec. 3.1.3.6), the color separation filters should, in an ideal color scenario, be adapted to these properties in an “error-compensating” way. The technology that has proven its worth in practice in coordinating the partial modules of reproduction technology is the manipulation of gradations, or gamma curves (sec. 3.1.3 and fig. 3.1-15). Looked at realistically, the user has virtually no other option for the fine coordination of process components in the analog information transfer chain. It is for this very reason that the use of already color-separated CMYK data is particularly widespread. Although the processing of image data in RGB or CIE LAB color system brings with it considerable advantages from the information theory point of view (e.g., ensures a wider range of color), an experienced reproduction expert likes to select the color system of the fi© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
nal primary colors for printing (for the most part CMYK) for processing, because he can then intervene directly in the final primary color gradations. On the other hand, it is virtually impossible to exert a specific influence on the reproduction result in the CMYK color system by the manipulation of RGB gradations without using a color management system. Current reproduction technology practice leads to the assumption that primary color gradations suffice for the representative projection of the reproduction characteristics of an image reproduction system. This assumption is incorrect, at least in the case of many output systems (e.g., offset printing and other conventional printing technologies, but primarily also in the case of non-impact printing systems). In reality the mixed color gradations do not behave proportionately to the primary colors. To understand the problem it is helpful to enter the reproduction behavior of a print reproduction process in a perceptively equidistant, colorimetric reference system (e.g., CIELAB). To do so, the color locations of the solid areas (100% area coverage for a given setpoint color film thickness) of the primary and secondary colors cyan, magenta, yellow, red, green, and blue and the color location of the blank printing paper are determined with a colorimeter and the seven coordinates are projected in the a*, b* plane of the Lab diagram. If the real Lab coordinates of the six individual gradations (halftone value) are now determined, six curves are produced, which start from the white point (the color of the paper) and end in the solid areas. It can be seen from the example of the reproduction characteristics of the example of a thermal sublimation printer (fig.1.4-23) that the primary and secondary color gradations typically do not change linearly in the a*, b*-diagram. Assuming that the projection of the gradations in the CIELAB diagram is perceptively equidistant, it can be concluded that primary color gradations do not suffice for the representative projection of reproduction behavior. This characteristic is quite typical of output systems (similar gradations are produced in offset printing). The practice of gradation-based image manipulation is correspondingly dubious. Because of the lack of other suitable methods, its use in analog reproduction technology is warranted, in digital image processing scarcely so, however. This finding is confirmed by practical experience which shows that the experts’ deliberate interventions in gradations are more likely to be made intuitively, seldom numerically.
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Fig. 1.4-23 Tone value curves (gradation curves) in the color space (0% to 100%) for primary colors CMY and the RGB secondary colors created from them in overprinting in the CIELAB system (Thermotransfer Proof System “Rainbow”, Imation)
b*
Yellow
100
Solid tone (100%)
Y
80 60 40
R
Halftone value
G
20 Red
0
Green
86
– 20
M
– 40
C
– 60
B
White point (0%)
– 80 –100
Blue – 100 – 80 – 60 – 40 – 20
The coordination of process sub-modules in analog and digital reproduction systems via gradation curves may also be referred to as characteristic curve communication. It can be controlled with densitometers or display components similar to densitometers (e.g., in image processing programs) and is strictly speaking only possible where: • the same color mode is present in both sub-modules (e.g., CMYK), • the color location of the primary colors is identical, and • both sub-modules have identical reproduction characteristics. Only if all the above requirements are met can equipment be adapted solely via gradation curves/characteristic curves. In all other cases more complex color space transformations (e.g., by means of multidimensional tables or functions) must be applied. A colorimeter is usually required to determine the parameters for color space transformations of this kind. Firstly, it is obvious that gradation curves can only be used for process control if the same color modes (color systems) are being applied. This initial requirement is met in a trivial way in the harmonization of film to printing plate, or printing plate to print, because there are four separate channels involved here and the color conversion to the printing system’s CMYK color space
0
a* 20
40
60
80
100
has already taken place earlier in the reproduction process. In this case, the color location of the primary colors does not change. In the control of digital printing systems, from PostScript data files, for example, more often than not a different situation exists. If the printer is controlled by means of RGB data, the output can no longer be converted to the CMYK of the printer via gradations alone and the first requirement on characteristic curve communication is not met. Even if the color modes of both sub-modules of the information transfer chain are identical, characteristic curve communication may not necessarily be possible. There are, indeed, two CMYK-based printing systems available for adapting a color copier (electrophotography with powder toner) to an offset printing process, for example, but usually the color locations of the primary colors differ considerably; consequently requirement two is not met. During the development of analog proofing processes (e.g., Cromalin and Matchprint, see also sec. 3.1.6), colorants for powder toner or overlay color film materials with primary-color locations that correspond to those of the standardized process inks under a given type of standardized illumination were sought. In addition, these colorants should also have the same reproduction characteristics (dot gain, etc.) as a conventional ink. In the absence of suitable colorants (e.g., pigments), in the end only substitute colorants which were as similar as possible were found. Therefore, strictly speaking these © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
materials also do not meet all requirements on an identical reproduction characteristic, though these interim solutions are to a great extent accepted in practice. In more recent, digital proofing systems based on nonimpact printing technologies (cf. chap. 5), it was no longer even attempted to adjust the colorimetrical reproduction properties to the printing process to be simulated via the selection of particularly suitable colorants. Multidimensional color transformations are used for equipment adjustment here, with the aid of color management systems and colorimetric measurement technique. The Color Black The color black has already been mentioned as a constituent of the CMYK color system, but no concrete data was given for determining the color separation of black, as it is shown in figure 1.4-19. Essentially, black is used in multicolor printing to reduce the technological expense of printing three chromatic colors to create black or a gray value by the direct use of black ink, to cut down on the use of expensive high-quality chromatic inks and also, primarily, in order to stabilize the printing process,that is, to make it less sensitive to variations in the individual colors. There are several methods for controlling the black color separation, that is, for supplementing chromatic composition using the colors cyan, magenta, and yellow with the fourth color, black: • chromatic composition with Under Color Removal (UCR), • achromatic composition (or GCR: gray component reduction), and • achromatic composition with chromatic color addition (UCA). These processes will be explained below on the examples of chromatic composition (the projections in fig. 1.4-24 are examples, without claiming to be metrologically accurate and procedurally comprehensive). Chromatic Composition. In chromatic composition all the hues (color tones) are built up from the chromatic base colors (process colors) cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y). Black (K) may possibly be used, if at all, to support the image shadows and to improve the contours. Dark hues are created by the appropriate mixing of the three chromatic base colors. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
If cyan, for example, is to be printed darker, equal portions (via changing the tone values) of magenta and yellow are added according to the desired blackness value, but these portions must be less than the portion of cyan. These portions of magenta and yellow mix with the correspondingly equal portion of cyan to form black, thus darkening the remaining portion of cyan. This will be made clear by means of an example. The brown shown in figure 1.4-24a was built up in chromatic composition from 70% cyan, 80% magenta, and 90% yellow, a total area coverage therefore of 240%. Black was not used. But because of the high portions of chromatic colors, the color balance is not easy to maintain. The chromatic composition of the brown shown in figure 1.4-24a comprises a chromatic portion and an achromatic one. The achromatic portion consists of 70% cyan, 70% magenta, and 70% yellow, which create a hue very close to gray when overprinting. Only the remaining 10% magenta and 20% yellow form the chromatic portion. Chromatic Composition with Under Color Removal. Under Color Removal (UCR) is a variant of chromatic composition, in which a part of the achromatic portion is replaced by black. Assume that in the example (fig. 1.4-24) there is to be a 30% UCR of the used brown. To this end, the achromatic portion composed from cyan, magenta, and yellow is reduced from 70% by 30% and replaced by the corresponding black portion. As a result of this the area coverage is no longer 240%, but only 180% with the same apparent hue. This greatly simplifies the printer’s task, because the danger of offsetting (the printed image is reflected in the pile on the reverse side of the sheet above; see sec. 1.7) is reduced and the color balance is easier to maintain (fig. 1.4-24b). Achromatic Composition. Unlike chromatic composition, in achromatic composition in principle all achromatic portions are replaced by black (GCR: gray component reduction). Therefore, the blackening of chromatic color shades is no longer done by means of complementary color, but solely by black. The brown shown as an example (fig. 1.4-24c) consists in achromatic composition of only magenta, yellow, and black. The area coverage is a total of only 100%. As a result of this, the color portions of cyan, magenta, and yellow can be noticeably reduced in all images and hues; the printing process becomes more stable, the ink acceptance (trapping) behavior noticeably improved.
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Fig. 1.4-24 Examples of determining the color separation for black using the multicolor printing of brown as an example. a Chromatic composition; b Chromatic composition with under color removal (UCR); c Achromatic composition (or GCR: gray component reduction); d Achromatic composition with chromatic color addition (UCA) Note: The chart serves to explain the principle and does not represent a metrologically accurate reproduction [1.4-8]
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Achromatic Composition with Chromatic Color Addition. Chromatic color addition (UCA Under Color Addition) is a variant of achromatic composition. To support neutral image shadows, if the density of the neutral black printing ink is insufficient, portions of cyan, magenta, and yellow are again added to the achromatic composition and reduced in the black (e.g., 25% in the example in accordance with fig. 1.4-24d). This type of image composition is widely used now and has proved its worth in practice. Image quality and print quality can be harmonized to each other very satisfactorily by this means. High-Fidelity Color Printing To achieve a greater range of color in multicolor printing, with the aim of • coming as close as possible to the color space that can be recorded by the sensitivity of human visual perception, and at the same time of
Fig. 1.4-25 Color gamut within the CIE (x, y, Y) chromaticity diagram for HiFi color printing (chromatic color system: cyan, magenta, yellow plus red, green, and blue) compared with conventional multicolor printing Note: The chart serves to explain the principle and does not represent a metrologically accurate reproduction [1.4-8]
• achieving the color gamut of a high-grade color monitor or color photograph, even more than four colors can be used for special printing jobs (e.g., using the complementary color system red, green, and blue (R, G, B) in addition to the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (C, M, Y, K) color system). Printing is then done in sheet-fed offset presses with seven printing units, for example. It is referred to as HiFi (high-fidelity) color printing. In figure 1.4-25 the color gamut attainable by this means is entered for comparison purposes in the CIE standardized color space (as shown in figs. 1.4-6, 1.4-16). Using six colors, two colors in addition to C, M, Y, and K, also leads to a markedly increased range of color. Consequently in HiFi color printing there are also “Hexachrome” systems in which special colors such as orange and green are printed.
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1.4.3
Halftone Process/Screening
The need to illustrate text with pictures is as old as printing itself. Alongside the perfecting of the printing process, a desire to reproduce illustrations in natural tonal gradations has also arisen. When printing first began, printers could meet these needs and requirements only to a limited extent. With the woodcuts that prevailed in the middle ages it was only possible to reproduce relatively coarse black or white lines and areas. Subsequent improvements in image reproduction, such as wood and copperplate engraving,enabled much finer elements to be reproduced. Sophisticated copperplate engravings, etchings, lithographs, and collotypes gained ground as artistic forms of expression, but they got no foothold in the industrial printing industry. After the invention of photography some 150 years ago, there was an ever-increasing desire to develop some form of continuous tone (contone) reproduction in the print, but the technology available in letterpress printing at that time was incapable of reproducing continuous tones. This state of affairs did not change until 1881, when Georg Meisenbach laid the basis for screening by inventing the autotypical halftone process that is still
used today. Using a structured grid, Meisenbach created repeatable screenings, that is contone reproductions. Meisenbach’s work on breaking up an image was pursued and refined by industrial reproduction technology. Grids in the form of glass screens with evenly distributed grid structures were created for graphic arts cameras. These cameras, using optical photographic means, broke down the contone values of the originals (e.g., photograph or painting) into different-sized screen dots (halftone values), that is, into printable elements (sec. 3.1.3.5). Screening, therefore, converts continuous tone originals into black and white information (image elements, halftone dots) that is suitable for producing the printing master (film or plate). Depending on the printing process, there are usually only two states of ink transfer (printing or non-printing). For this reason, the varying visual impression of lightness or darkness must be created by varying the size of the halftone dot. If the screen structures are fine enough for the viewing distance of the screened image, the integrating effect of the human eye will “smooth out”the image, and the observer, therefore, sees an image that, with its contone gradations, is visually consistent with the original. The greater the number
Intensity I
Sensitivity of the human eye
I max (light)
∆l/2 ∆I
I min (dark) Spatial wavelength (w)
1,0 I average 0,8 Location x 0,6
0,4 Line pattern Relative visibility (V):
0,2
DI/2 I max – I min V= = I mean I max + I min
a
Spatial wavelength: w (corresponds to screen width) Spatial frequency fs = 1/w (corresponds to screen frequency, screen ruling)
60 l/cm screen (150 lpi) 4 6 2 fs: Spatial frequency (lines per mm)
b
Fig 1.4-26 Visibility of line structures for the visual perception of the human eye at normal observation distance (approx. 30 cm). a Relative visibility of intensity variations (definition); b Sensitivity of the human eye to line structures/pattern © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
of screen dots per image area, the more natural the effect of the image. The term screen ruling (or screen frequency) is used to define the closeness of the screen dots to each other. When observing a 60 lines/cm screen (i.e.,the screen frequency,usually referred to as the screen ruling L = 60 lines per cm, corresponding to a dot spacing w = 1/L = 0.167 mm) at a normal reading distance (approx. 30 cm), the eye is usually no longer able to detect the individual dots (fig. 1.4-26). Throughout the course of time, screening technology has undergone considerable changes and improvements. With the aid of the computer, the basic, manual screening process has been scientifically and mathematically analyzed in order to develop newer, electronic reproduction processes: Computer-aided screening is now possible. The basic principle of breaking down an image into different-sized screen dots which were equally spaced apart was initially preserved. The first systems capable of electronic screening were output scanners (drum imagesetters) that imaged the films with very finely focused laser beams. The individual, different-sized dots were assembled from several laser spots (picture elements, pixels). Virtually all laser imagesetters now work on this principle. Screening of Color Separations When multicolor illustrations are reproduced, the original is broken down into several color separations
(see sec. 1.4.2); first into the four basic colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) of the printing process, and then, as described above, into individual printing elements. The screening of the individual color separations is done at different screen angles. This is necessary because the overprinting of different colors will occur without problems only using this procedure. Improper positioning of color separations causes interference, or so-called moiré patterns, which might severely impair the image impression (fig. 1.4-27). With conventional reproduction technology, the color separations for the three chromatic colors (as explained in sec. 3.1.3.6) were each offset at screen angles of 30° in relation to each other.With four colors the least distinctive color, yellow, is output at an optimal angle of only 15° in relation to magenta or cyan (fig.1.4-28a). The printer can almost completely prevent the formation of visible moiré patterns in this way, but, because interference is interrelated with the image structure, it is impossible to entirely avoid these visual disturbances. In spite of the optimal angle formed when attempting to reduce interference effects/moiré phenomena,rosettes may form (fig. 1.4-28b) in homogeneous color areas in particular. The formation of a rosette also depends on the relative positioning of the color separations to one another. So color register fluctuations may cause irregular rosette formation during printing. It is also true that the finer the screen ruling, the less detectable the distorting structure. In color reproduction today, most jobs make use of a screen ruling of about 60 lines/cm. Nevertheless, with originals having a distinctive, fine structure of their own (textile or filigree patterns, for example) structure-related moiré patterns may occur and are virtually unavoidable. Fine screens with up to 150 lines/cm are sometimes used for the reproduction of extremely fine structure details; although they reduce moiré effects, they do not always prevent them. Fine screens impose exacting technical process-related requirements on reproduction technology and printing. Dot Shapes Even in the days of conventional analog reproduction technology, printers experimented with numerous dot shapes in order to reduce incalculable dot gains, optimize color stability, and form an industrial standard. In general terms, one can distinguish between the following basic dot shapes:
Fig. 1.4-27 Interference effect (Moiré) through overlaying two periodic structures with similar screen angles © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• round dot, • square dot,
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Screening Processes One can simulate continuous tones with screening in a number of ways. Amplitude Modulation. In so-called amplitude-modulated screening (autotypical screening, periodic screening), the individual dots are spaced the same distance apart, but have different diameters (or different areas, depending on the dot shape). This halftone process, along with its distinct susceptibility to moiré patterns, has already been described. a
b Fig. 1.4-28 Rosette formation in screened multicolor printing. a Angling of the screened color separations with rosette formation; b Rosettes of different structures appearing as special moiré phenomenon (to make the effect more obvious, all color separations are printed with the same color)
• chain dot, • elliptical dot. In practice, it has not been possible to establish an ideal dot shape because applications and process techniques are often too diverse. For example, system A, which employs screening with square dots, may produce better print results than the screening with system B; but the latter system may produce a better chain dot than system A. This variation in print quality is attributed not only to the algorithms used for screening (like that in the various software-based, digital screening processes), but also to the technical hardware components for exposing the screened images.
Frequency Modulation. In the case of frequency-modulated screening, the individual dots have the same diameter but are different distances apart (non-periodic screening). When using the frequency modulation screening process to convert continuous tones of the original into a quantity of dots in a so-called screen cell, the dot spacing must be specified for a known dot size. This can be done according to various algorithms. Usually the distances for a certain tone value differ from individual dot to individual dot (which would lead to susceptibility to moiré patterns), but are distributed randomly. For this reason, frequency-modulated screening is also referred to as random or stochastic screening. Figure 1.4-29 illustrates both screening processes, amplitude-modulated and frequency-modulated. The single-color image in figure 1.4-30 shows that, when using identical dots of the smallest possible size, FM screening produces better reproduction of detail in printing than AM screening; it must also be possible to repeatedly reproduce each of the small dots in print. Figure 1.4-31 gives a comparison of amplitude modulation with frequency modulation for the continuoustone reproduction of a multicolor image. One can clearly see that the FM screening produces a higher resolution and that its stochastic, random screening prevents rosettes. Figure 1.4-32 gives a physical description of the terms amplitude and frequency-modulation. In halftone screening, the image information is basically contained in the amplitude, that is, the dot size (therefore amplitude modulation, since the image information is coded by the amplitude of a periodic spatial frequency). On the other hand, in random or frequency-modulated screening, the image information is coded in the frequency ranges, that is, the dot spacing. Hybrid Screening. There are also hybrid techniques for screening continuous-tone originals: both AM and FM © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Tone value 40% 20% 10%
5%
Paper
Amplitude modulation (conventional screening)
Halftone dot
Screen cell
Ink layer
Screen width Frequency modulation: Contone reproduction with a varying number of dots of the same size
a
Frequency modulation (stochastic dot arrangement, screening) Fig. 1.4-29 Continuous-tone (contone) reproduction with amplitude-modulated (AM) screening and frequency-modulated (FM) screening
screening are used, depending on the image. A possible algorithm is based on the approach of using FM screening for very light and very dark tones and AM screening for the remaining tone value range (fig. 1.4-33). A comprehensive representation of various dot arrangements and combinations is given in figure 1.4-34. Intensity Modulation. So far we have assumed that tone values for printing are reproduced merely by varying the dot area and/or the dot spacing and that the ink film thickness on the substrate/paper is identical for all dots (apart from slight technical, printing-related deviations). With printing technologies in which the ink can be transferred to the paper in varying amounts from dot to dot, a tone value is created by modulation of the ink film thickness; optical density modulation is achieved. The change to the tone value can be done three-dimensionally: through the area of the dot and the thickness of the ink film. This is possible in gravure printing with varying cell depths, or non-impact printing technologies such as electrophotography or ink jet. This is shown in figure 1.4-35 corresponding to figure 1.4-29. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
b Fig. 1.4-30. Comparison of AM screening and FM screening. a Amplitude-modulated (autotypical) screening; b Frequency-modulated (stochastic) screening (IFRA [1.4-11])
A larger color gamut can be reproduced in the print through the combination of density modulation with amplitude or frequency-modulated screening. Hence, the combination of FM modulation with density modulation aims to optimize the reproduction of detail and color. Digital Screening Digital screening is considered an algorithmic process that creates the illusion of contone images from an arrangement of small, binary dot elements. As a result of the current “computer to … technologies” such as computer to film, computer to plate and computer to press/print (see sec. 4.1), there are virtually no limits to the practical application of vari-
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Color photograph (continuous tone)
AM screening
FM screening
Fig. 1.4-31 Detail of a color photograph (continuous tone) for reproduction using conventional (AM) screening and stochastic (FM) screening for creating halftones in multicolor printing (AGFA)
ous halftone processes. Digital screening simulates the tone values of the originals with dots assembled from individual, small image elements (pixels: picture elements). Figure 1.4-36 illustrates the process of digitally reproducing a conventional analog dot. The higher the addressability (dpi: dots per inch) of the output device (film imagesetter, computer to plate equipment or computer to press/print system), the more accurate the reproduction of the dot shape of the analog AM screening. Only with the advent of digital imaging technology has the widespread use of FM screening been made possible. The smallest reproducible pixel that an imagesetter can generate and position is, for example, the dot for frequency-modulated screening. The tone values are then simulated by varying the dot distance in the spacing of the pixel cell size/pitch (fig. 1.4-37). Individual dots of varying numbers and shape are then combined into groups (clustered) in accordance with the algorithm for FM (stochastic) screening. Another example for comparing AM and FM screening is given in figure 1.4-38. In both illustrations the
dots have been built up digitally from individual pixels with the same adressability/resolution. In the case of conventional screening with an analog dot, the number of gray levels (or gray values) per screen cell depends on the reproducibility of different-sized dots. For a 60 lines/cm screen, one can assume that there will be approximately 70 to 100 different dot sizes/areas (this means that a dot’s diameter may vary in a range from approximately 1 to 2 µm). If the dot is then built up from individual picture elements (pixels), the number of different tone values is determined by the size of the screen cell – in which a tone value of the original is to be simulated (screen ruling L in lines per centimeter or lines per inch) – and the addressability A (in dpi, i.e., dots per inch), at which the individual pixels can be positioned. As figure 1.4-39 shows, the number of picture elements N per screen cell (gray levels) results from the screen ruling L and the addressability A, where N = (A/L)2 (e.g., N = 64 for L = 150 lpi and A = 1200 dpi). Since a screen cell can contain a maximum of N pixels and include the value for the “blank” (unprinted) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Fig. 1.4-32 Spatial tone value gradation. a Amplitude modulation; b Frequency modulation
Screen cell Dot
Tone value Amplitude modulation: Amplitude a is proportional to the tone value a1 a2 w1
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Tone value Dot
Dot line within the screen cell Amplitude a w1 w2 Dot spacing (Spatial wavelength w) b
screen cell N+1, possible gray values for a range of 0% to 100% in N levels (e.g., with N = 64 in levels of 1.56%) result. For this it was assumed that the individual elements of the screen cell have been covered completely and can have only two states, covered or not covered, that is, black or white. If a printing process is used in which the individual dot can be printed with varying optical density (fig. 1.4-35), not just two, but five gray values per pixel can be reproduced (g = 5) (see the example in fig. 1.4-39). Consequently, the number of reproducible gray levels per screen cell increases considerably. For binary as© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
w3 Dot spacing: w1 ≠ w2 ≠ w3 Spatial frequency fs ≠ const. Amplitude: a = const.
Location
signment of the pixel elements (g = 2) with screening of 150 lpi and addressability of 1200 dpi the resulting number of gray values is 65 (G = 65). But if five different gray values per pixel can be inked, the resultant number of gray values is 257 per screen cell – a considerably improved reproduction of the tone value ranges. If the structures in the image are not particularly fine, reproduction at a lower resolution is possible. In the example (g = 5) a reproduction at only 600 dpi with the same number of gray levels per screen cell (64) can be achieved as with 1200 dpi and just two gray levels (g = 2) per pixel.
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600 dpi
Tone value Analog dot 40% 42 1m
Fig. 1.4-33 Hybrid screening: a combination of AM and FM screening (SambaScreen, Barco)
Equal size and spacing
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b Fig. 1.4-36 Digital dot structure. a Reproduction of an analog dot from picture elements with digital technology of varying addressability (resolution: dpi); b Reproduction of a tonal value gradation
Fig. 1.4-34 Dot structures for the reproduction of tone values
Ink film thickness
Dot Screen cell Fig. 1.4-35 Optical density modulation by changing the ink film thickness
In the operations set of the PostScript page description language (which is the dominant standard in the printing industry; cf. sec. 3.2.9) the three parameters described above – screen ruling, alignment of the screen lines, and dot shape – that are specified in the “setscreen” operator to create an amplitude-modulated screen are fixed. The dot shape is described by the “spot function” and is ideally round in its original form. A frequency-modulated image format should, in theory, be carried out throughout the entire image without segmentation. For practical reasons, screen cells are often defined with frequency-modulated screening in computer systems; the arrangement of the individual dot elements in the individual cells, however, is random. To avoid complex, mathematical analyses of the surroundings and thus save on computing time, screen cells with random dot distribution are formed. Nonetheless, there is always a risk that moiré-type patterns will form because of the periodic use of a screen cell structure [1.4-10]. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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1 mm
a Agfa CristalRaster 21 1m
Crosfield FM 28 1m
Heidelberg Diamond 30 1m
Scitex Random 20 1m
Scitex Fulltone 15–25 1m
UGRA/FOGRA Velvet 41 1m
b Fig. 1.4-37 Digital screen structure. a 12.5% tone value with AM and FM screening (resolution of 1200 dpi); b 25.0% tone value reproduced with different algorithms for FM screening (manufacturer and product name are given, and the diameter of the individual dot) (IFRA, [1.4-11])
The most harmonious, uninterrupted tone value structure possible embodies the most important quality parameters for a frequency-modulated halftone process. When randomly assigning individual dot elements, one must ensure that no unwanted dot conglomerations form that the observer’s eye could perceive as disruptive. The individual dot elements are, in fact, sufficiently small for typical viewing distance and normally not recognized by most observers. In contrast, isolated dot conglomerations will usually be noticed im© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
mediately and may be registered as interference patterns. Especially in terms of amplitude-modulated screening processes, the reproduction of larger dots with small, individual dot elements in an age of digitally addressable exposure devices can be considered a relic from the world of analog, photographic reproduction technology. In principle, frequency-modulated screening seems to be the ideal process for presentday digital reproduction technology. In practice, however, the amplitude-modulated image structure is still
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AM Screening
FM Screening
Fig. 1.4-38 Comparison of amplitude-modulated (AM) screening with frequency-modulated (FM) screening (AccuTone, R. R. Donnelley)
Screen ruling L [lpi], (L [lpcm])
1" A 20 0l p 0L i /cm ) (~8
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Fig. 1.4-39 Correlation between screen ruling, addressability and gray values in the case of digital screening and image structure © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
predominant. In platemaking, for example, it is possible to work with the largest possible dots, offering much greater production tolerances. Because of smaller dot sizes, the gradation behavior of frequencymodulated reproductions reacts more sensitively to interference factors. Frequency-modulated image structure variations usually improve the continuoustone simulation, but as a result of using smaller, individual dots, there may be a detrimental effect on the stability of transfer characteristics curves. An advantage of FM screening is that color register variations – especially in homogeneous color areas with multicolor structures – prevent color variations or make them less obvious.
1.4.4
Quality Control/Measurement Techniques
The quality of the print depends greatly on the preparatory work done in prepress, the printing process, the machine engineering employed, and the materials used for creating the printed product such as paper and ink. The quality of the final printed product itself is affected by the finishing processes and equipment. The quality of the print (i.e., the single or multicolor print image with pictures, text, and graphics) can be specified through the quality of the coloring, the reFig. 1.4-40 Factors of influence and specifications determining the quality of the print
production of fine structures and the range of tone values, the precision of the multicolor overprinting and the surface properties of the print image and the entire printed page or sheet. Quality-determining factors and selected specification used for defining quality are given in figure 1.4-40. These specifications must be definable and measurable. Appropriate measuring instruments are available for metrological quality control. Most of these work on the basis of specific test elements (measuring targets/patches) which are printed together with the print image. In addition the printing quality is checked visually. To perform a visual quality control the illumination and viewing conditions must fulfill some minimum requirements (ISO 3664). The subjective visual inspection brings a psychological element into the assessment of the image. Depending on the image message, the image structure, and the intended use for the prints, different assessment criteria will be applied. Only measurability provides the possibility for objective and, to a certain extent, automated quality control in printing. One of the most important quality characteristics in printing is the quality of the color reproduction. The color effect of the printed image is measured in order to correct slight deviations between original, proof, and production, or to ensure consistent quality throughout the entire print run.
Influences
Prepress
Print
• Scanning • Color separation • Screening • Plate imaging • Calibration, color management • Technology • Ink and material transportation/ flow
Printing quality
Specifications • Color coordinates • Optical density • Dot shape • Dot gain • Ink trapping Color • Doubling • Evenness of ink distribution (ink layer) • Sharpness Reso• Gradation, tone lution value range
Postpress
• Coating • Folding • Binding
Register
• Dot/color separation position • Printed image position
Material
• Paper • Ink • Extras/ additives
Surface
• Gloss • Mottling • Evenness
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1.4.4.1 Color Measurement Both densitometric and, increasingly, colorimetric processes and instruments are used for color measurements on the print. While colorimetric measurements are based on techniques where colors are measured as they are perceived by the human eye (as described in sec. 1.4.1, fig. 1.4-14), densitometric techniques are basically a measurement of ink film thickness that has been adapted to the inks used in the print, and where the processing of the measuring values is adapted to human perception/sensitivity in relation to changes of lightness/saturation with varying ink film thicknesses. Measuring optical density is a common process, and there are tried and tested measuring instruments available. Such densitometers can determine not only the optical density, but also the parameters that characterize halftone printing, such as dot gain and relative printing contrast; the fact that ink acceptance/trapping can also be measured is an important feature in multicolor printing. Densitometry On multicolor presses, the application of ink in each printing unit must be monitored and adjusted individually. The fact that several colors have to be printed together in a halftone image makes both visual assessment and measurement of the individual inks in the image relatively difficult. The measuring accuracy is limited because the measuring signal is partly superimposed by the other inks. Printing a so-called color control bar with measurement patches in the individual colors in the trim-off alongside the image has proved good practice (fig. 1.4-41). Color control bars of this kind are usually printed over the entire sheet width, and the individual patches are positioned so that they are assigned to the ink zones of the ink fountain. This enables targeted adjustment or control of the color/ink flow. Density can be monitored at the patches in a print image using a densitometer. Changes in the inks
Solid tone
Halftone
40%
80%
Gray balance
Solid tone overprinting
Fig. 1.4-42 Typical examples of color measurement patches (size of measuring patch, e.g., 5 mm ¥ 6 mm)
can be detected easily by means of the density value. As shown in figure 1.4-42, elements for solid tones, halftones, gray balance, and solid color overprinting are contained in the color control bar. Optical density D is defined in the form of a logarithmic ratio (fig. 1.4-43): D= log 1 =log I O b I Reflectance factor b is the ratio of the light intensity I of the light remitted by the ink film in relation to the intensity of light IO remitted by the blank paper. Reflectance factor b decreases as the film thickness increases. To obtain a measured value proportionate to the change of film thickness, the reciprocal value 1/b for calculation of the optical density is established first, then the logarithm for reproducing values corresponding to non-linear human
Ink zone width (e.g. 32.5 mm) Fig. 1.4-41 Color control bar with color measurement patches © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Fig. 1.4-43 The basic principle of a densitometer for optical density measurement
Light source
Display Electronics & computer
Receiver Analyzer Optics Polarizing filter
D l
Color filter Aperture l0
Sample
Paper Reflectance: β =
visual perception. Figure 1.4-43 presents the density characteristic in relation to the ink film thickness. Prior to taking measurements, the measuring instrument is normally calibrated to the substrate (paper white) – to the densitometric value “0.”(A special, standardized calibration white, e.g., barium sulfate, can be used for absolute calibration, so that substrate-independent devices can be compared with/adjusted to each other.) To measure printing inks of different color with the same light source, color filters are fitted in the beam path of the densitometers. The color filters are matched to the process inks of common color sets (C, M, Y, K) for four-color printing. The color filter should have the maximum transmission in the minimum reflectance of the color to be measured, that is, it should possess the complementary color to the color intended for measurement (e.g., blue filter for yellow, green filter for magenta, red filter for cyan) which results in high measured values and an optimal sensitivity of the changes of ink film thicknesses (the filters are standardized and installed in the various measuring instruments). The term “color density” was introduced because of this assessment of the color in the density measurement (in contrast, general optical density without special filtration is mainly used to measure black inks; however, very often a so-called visual filter or the green filter for the measurement of magenta is used here, too). Densitometers have no adapted filters for special colors, and so a preferable alternative is to take a measurement with the filter that can obtain the highest density values. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Optics
2 1
s 1 2 3 Ink film thickness s [µm]
Ink l l0
Optical density
Density: D = log
1 β
The density curves for the common inks are given in figure 1.4-44, together with the ink film thicknesses typical of multicolor offset printing. In order to measure spectral density, the appropriate densitometers are fitted with special narrow-band filters (e.g., bandwidth of 30 nm). This spectral density measurement resulted from the need to improve the comparability of various measuring instruments. When making a densitometric reading, the typical measuring aperture/spot has a diameter of approximately 3mm. The Effect of Polarizing Filters. Both wet and dry ink can be measured with a densitometer. Wet inks have a relatively smooth, glossy surface. To some extent, the ink adapts itself to the structure of the paper surface during drying and loses some of its gloss in the case of an irregular, rough structure. Measuring the ink when still wet will produce a different result to when it is dry (the measured density value for a wet ink is higher than that for a dry ink). To compensate for this, two crossed linear polarizing filters are placed in the beam path (fig. 1.4-43). Of the light waves emitted in all directions, polarizing filters only allow those moving in a certain direction to pass through. Part of the light rays polarized by the first polarization filter are reflected by the ink surface specularly, that is, without altering their direction. The second polarizing filter is aligned at an angle of 90° to the first so that the reflected light waves cannot pass through (fig. 1.4-45),thus suppressing the specularly reflected light for this measurement. However, light beams that penetrate
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1 Fundamentals
Density
102
Black 2.5 Cyan Magenta Yellow
2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5
Ink film thickness 0.0 0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5 [1m]
Fig. 1.4-44 The optical densities of inks with different ink film thicknesses
Direction of scattering Direction of vibration
into the ink film and are reflected either by the ink or by the substrate lose their uniform polarization. Therefore, they are, in part, allowed through by the second polarizing filter and reach the receiver (fig. 1.4-43). Consequently, by blocking the portions of light specularly reflected by the wet ink, one can obtain approximately identical readings from wet and dry inks, that is, the wet printing ink with more gloss is measured as if it were already dry. Due to the absorption by the polarizing filter, in principle less reflected light reaches the receiver, which leads to slightly higher measured values. Area Coverage (Tone value) For true-to-color reproduction of halftone images in the print, the change in dot diameter is the critical factor for the print image transfer, as these changes lead to tonal and color shifts. There are various factors which affect the halftone value transfer and need to be monitored in the interests of standardization. During printing, the simplest control parameter for halftone value transfer is the measurement of the dot percentage in the halftone patches of the color control bars printed along with the image (fig. 1.4-41 and fig. 1.4-42). The area coverage in the print (FD) (i.e., the portion of the area covered with ink within a control patch covered with halftone dots in relation to the entire area of the control patch) can be measured with a densitometer. Using the “Murray-Davies” equation, the area coverage percentage is calculated from the remitted light intensity of solid and halftone areas as follows: 1– bR FD [%] = ◊100% 1– b V where
bR: Reflectance factor, measured in the halftone patch bV: Reflectance factor, measured in the solid tone patch
In this case it is assumed that the halftone and the solid tone have been printed with the same ink film thickness. Accordingly, the area coverage is calculated from the measured density values, as follows: FD[%] = Paper Fig. 1.4-45 The effect of polarizing filters for avoiding specular reflection on smooth surface structure when measuring optical density
where
1– 10D R
◊100% 1– 10D V DV is solid tone density DR is halftone density
When screens are measured with a densitometer, it is not the geometrical area coverage, that is, the ratio be© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
tween dots and paper white on the measuring patch, but the “optically effective area coverage.” The difference between geometric and optically effective area coverage is due to the fact that in visual observation and in densitometric measurements, part of the arriving light penetrates into the paper between the dots at the unprinted areas, but is trapped under the dots during reflection and thus absorbed (fig. 1.4-46). Called “light gathering,” this effect causes the dots to appear optically larger than they are in reality. For this reason, the optically effective area coverage consists of the geometric area coverage and the optical area gain. Mathematically this is interpreted, for instance, using the “Yule-Nielsen” equation, an expanded “MurrayDavies” equation. Dot Gain For an assessment of the printing process in conjunction with the materials used, the area coverage in the print constitutes the key measured and reference quantity. Dot gain/tone value increase (Z) is calculated from the area coverage of the film (FF) as a master for platemaking and the tone value (FD) is transferred to/printed on the substrate via the printing form, printing process, and printing units as follows: Z[%] = FD[%]– FF [%] Using the color control bar (containing measuring patches as shown in fig. 1.4-42) the area coverage
value (e.g., 55%) can be determined for cyan by measuring the solid and halftone patches (e. g., 40%). Based on the known area coverage of the film for the halftone patch of 40%, the resulting dot gain is 15%. Dot gain is usually positive because the blanket enlarges the dot upon transfer to the paper (given that the tone value of the film does not change significantly from film to plate – which is generally the case; and depending on whether the printing plate is made with a positive or negative working plate). The change in tone values resulting from the printing process must be considered for the color separation and film making. In the standardised positive copy during the manufacture of printing plates, the dots are copied from the film to the plate somewhat smaller for practical reasons, because when printing under standard printing conditions the dots expand. Figure 1.4-47 gives a typical print characteristic curve. Dot gain essentially depends on the paper’s surface and its absorption/ink setting behavior, the ink rheology, the blanket, printing pressure, and so on. In the attempt to standardize offset printing, standard values have been specified for the dot gain from film to print. It is the printer’s job to achieve the standard for dot gain by appropriately selecting materials and making suitable press adjustments. Derived Quality Parameters Other parameters that characterize the print can be derived by means of density measurements, particularly in relation to the ink transfer for printing halftone and solid areas (relative printing contrast or, in short form, contrast) and the overprinting of solid tone color areas (ink acceptance/trapping). Contrast. From the measured values of the ink density in the solid DV and the ink density in the halftone screen DR one can calculate the relative printing contrast. In doing so, it is preferable to measure the DR value in the three-quarter tone; for instance 70% as indicated by the color control bar in figure 1.4-41. D – DR K[%] = V ◊100% DV
Ink Paper
Fig. 1.4-46 Light gathering in the area of the inked paper surface © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Ink Trapping. The ink trapping is calculated from the ink densities of solid overprint patches with one, two, or three colors and in consideration of the color sequence. Examples of corresponding measuring patches are given in figures 1.4-41 and 1.4-42.
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Fig. 1.4-47 Print characteristic curve and dot gain
20%
40%
80%
100%
30%
55%
90%
100%
Dot gain Z [%] 10%
15%
10%
0%
Film FF
Print FD
Print characteristic curve 100% 90% Area coverage (tone value) in print (FD)
104
80% 70% 60% 50%
real: Curve 2 (Print characteristic curve)
Z
40%
Curve 1 (ideal)
30% 20% DV = 1.50
10%
0% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Area coverage (tone value) in film (FF)
The ink trapping calculated on the basis of the following formula states by how many percent one ink lies over another and where the ink printed by itself onto the paper (for which the ink trapping is 100%) is used as the comparative quantity. The following applies for two-color overprinting: FA 2[%] = 1
D1+2 – D1 ◊100% D2
where: D1+2 is the ink density of the two overprinted colors, D1 is the ink density of the color that was printed first,
D2
is the ink density of the color that was printed last. All ink densities must be measured using the filter for the second color. Accordingly, the following applies for three-color overprinting: FA3 [%] = 2 1
D1+2+3 – D1+2 ◊100% D3
where: D1+2+3 is the ink density of the three overprinted colors and © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
D3
is the ink density of the color that was printed last. All ink densities must be measured using the filter for the third (last) printed color. Densitometric Measurement Systems Hand-held densitometers are suitable for quality control, provided that only a few measurements are required on a sheet. Random checks undertaken in the interest of offset printing standardization and random checks of tone values represent typical examples of the use of the hand-held densitometer. However, the constant monitoring of a print run or the continuous adaptation of the ink feed in the press requires an abundance of additional measured values. Automated measurement systems have been developed for this purpose. Scanning densitometers were primarily developed for offset printing in order to be able to scan the control bars that are printed at the sheet tail, for instance, and span the entire width of the printed sheet. In print run control, it is helpful to set the ink zones in the printing units of multicolor presses according to density values. Because separate measurements are required in each ink zone, a scanning densitometer must move along the control bar, scanning the sheet at right angles to the direction of travel. This task can be performed off-line by a densitometer that scans the sample sheet previously removed from the delivery of the press. The control bar is usually printed in the trim area at the sheet tail. The necessary measuring targets (solid, halftone, additional control patches) are arranged in a set sequence in the control bar (see also fig. 1.4-41). Since automatic patch recognition cannot be done with an adequate level of certainty, the type of control bar (and therefore the target sequence) is entered in the measurement system prior to evaluation. The geometric alignment in relation to the guidance of the printed sheet in the press is also stipulated (e.g., center of press), so that each separate measurement on the printed sheet can be assigned to the correct ink zone. In packaging printing, in particular, color areas are often printed with special color tones (decorative colors) for which narrow tolerances apply. Normally there is insufficient space on the printed sheet for a continuous control bar, but it is possible to arrange it in sections between the individual copies on the sheet. Special scanning densitometers with a two-coordinate measuring system permit the measuring head of the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
densitometer to be moved automatically to any measuring point on the sheet; measurement coordinates, however, must be programmed in prior to printing. Numerous, more recently developed color-measuring systems (whether they are simple hand-held instruments or automated systems) that scan the entire printed sheet are based primarily on spectral metrology. In addition to determining the colorimetric parameters (sec. 1.4.1), such instruments can also calculate the optical density as a derived quantity following the measurement of the spectral reflectance (by digital filtration, for example). There is little difference in the external appearance of the instruments; figure 1.4-51 shows hand-held measuring instruments and figure 1.4-52, a scanning measurement system. For in-line color measurement, especially for printing with web presses, there are measurement systems which make possible the continuous monitoring and, to some extent, even control of the production process. Generally speaking, these types of systems are not economically feasible for use with sheet-fed presses (sec. 2.1.4 includes additional information). Spectral Color Measurement The correct comparison of solid tone colorings on different prints based on density measurements is only possible if, for the specification of reference values, prints have been used for which the same paper and the same ink were used as for the job. For this reason, density measurement is very effective for quality control within a print run. However, it is less suitable for a comparison between proof and production since different materials are employed for each of these processes. These problems in densitometry have been overcome with the help of color measurements. The measuring of colors as they are perceived by the human eye has made it possible to start-up a production press in accordance with suitable colorimetric values of a proof, and to adjust the press to the specified color values within narrow tolerances. As described in section 1.4.1, color measurement is based on colorimetric techniques. The basic structure of a color-measuring device is given in figure 1.4-48. Spectral color measurement itself can be done either by means of three special filters that have been adapted to the visual perception of the human eye (tristimulus filters), (fig. 1.4-49, colorimeter) or primary measurement of the spectral reflectance factor distribution and subsequent digital filtering by the methods illustrated in figure 1.4-50 (spectrophotometer).
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Operator input Measuring and Operator Communication Electronics Radiation Filtering and Detection (analog or digital)
Basic tristimulus or spectral measuring values
Detection Optics
Monitor
Output Interface
Data Transmission
Color space coordinates
Printer
Illumination Optics
Colorimetric Calculations
Display
Reflected light Measuring patch Aperture
Object (control patch) Paper
Output Device
Measuring Device
Ink
Fig. 1.4-48 Basic structure of a color-measuring device
Figure 1.4-51 shows some typical hand-held measuring instruments for color measurement. The scanning spectrophotometer integrated in the color measurement and control equipment shown in figure 1.4-52 is based on the diffraction grating principle (fig. 1.4-50c). The color measurement and control system illustrated in figure 1.4-53 records the entire printed sheet in one measuring run at a local resolution of approx. 2 ¥ 3 mm2. An optical multiplexer scans the entire printed sheet. The spectral measurement itself for the individual
Fig. 1.4-49 Photoelectric colorimeter; optical filtering with tristimulus filters
measuring areas is also based on the diffraction grating principle, much like that of the system illustrated in figure 1.4-52. In addition to measuring the control bar patches and the decorative colors, a system of this type can also take measurements directly from the image. The possibility to take measurements in the image has always been every printer’s wish because in the end it is the quality of the image that is decisive for the customer’s satisfaction with the print job. With the overall measurement of a sheet, it has become easier to
Illumination reference Optical filtering
Operator input
x Electronics
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y Fiber optics z
Computer
Color space coordinates
Receiver Tristimulus filter (standard color matching functions) Measuring head Xenon flash lamp (annular illumination) Sample (measuring patch) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
∼ β(λ)
a Illumination
Receiver Motor Narrow band filter
Optics Sample
ating
Rot
b
Filter wheel (e.g., 64 filters)
Aperture
Red
∼ β(λ)
Blue
Receiver
Dispersing prism Diffraction grating reflector/mirror (e.g., 250 lpmm)
c
Aperture (pinhole) (e.g., 50 1m x 250 1m)
Blue Red
Fiber optics Light source
Diode line array (e.g., 512 diodes) Electronics
Sample
Reflectance factors
β(λ)
Computer Colorimetric values Fig. 1.4-50 Spectrometer principles for measuring spectral reflectance factors. a Filter wheel principle; b Monochromator principle; c Diffraction grating principle
evaluate mixed forms using different criteria and measurement references. The evaluation of the control bar, the assessment of multicolor images produced by overprinting, the evaluation of decorative colors in solid areas, and so forth are now possible. Special software algorithms automatically detect suitable measuring ar© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
eas on the printed sheet. This considerably simplifies makeready, especially in packaging printing. Moreover, the inspection of the entire print image for damage and defects on the basis of the scanned sheet can take place via the monitor or in an automated process. All density values and derived quantities such as area coverage, ink acceptance, and so forth can also be determined from the spectral measuring values. This means that all traditional control methods can be supported metrologically on the basis of color measurement. On the other hand, however, color measurement during printing is a prerequisite for the efficient use of color management methods. Density measurement is based on measurement of the ink film thickness, and therefore density variations are direct measuring variables for controlling the ink feed in the individual printing units. Colorimetric measurements and their comparison of measured and reference values indicate color location deviations which need to be calculated to adjust the inking units for changing the ink film thicknesses for the process colors in the press. Section 2.1.4 provides further information about this topic. Inspection of the Image In gravure, flexographic, and rotary-screen printing the webs are usually printed in a continuous printing process; the web is rewound again after the dryer section (in web offset, continuous printing is, by and large, still the exception). If quality control cannot take place on the running web, the press needs to be stopped in order to do so. However, since faults can occur at any time during production, web inspection devices have been developed for in-line monitoring. The specifications of web inspection systems vary considerably depending on the task to be performed. Most devices are suitable for visually detecting faults in the print image, gross fluctuations in the color, or fairly large deviations in the register. Reliable color control throughout the entire print run can only be ensured by a densitometer or colorimeter that take measurements on the web during printing. The stroboscope provides the simplest means of visually inspecting the running web. The stroboscope uses a periodic flash of light that is synchronized with the press speed, making it seem to the observer as if the web were standing still. Optical systems incorporating a rotating mirror enable highquality image inspection. The quality of the static image also enables the press operator to detect bigger changes in color.
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a
b
Fig. 1.4-51 Examples of hand-held color measuring instruments. a Spectrophotometer SPM 100 (Gretag); b Spectrodensitometer 938 (X-Rite) Fig. 1.4-52 Scanning spectrophotometer for print quality measurement and control (CPC 21, Heidelberg)
Video web inspection systems are used to an increasing extent because these systems can detect structural defects as well as fairly large color variations. Video monitoring has the advantage of offering digital image analysis with automated fault detection. The accuracy of color detection is limited by the camera’s technology and quality, which do not usually allow density measurement or even color measurement. Therefore, systems of this kind are suitable for computer-assisted image inspection, but not for binding color measurement and control with-
in the narrow tolerances of the required printing quality. 1.4.4.2 Color Register Register is traditionally the exact superimposition of the print images on the front and back side of a substrate with no geometric differences. Accuracy requirements are approximately 1/10 mm. A much higher level of accuracy in the overprinting of the separate color separations for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (color register) is essential for quality multicolor printing. The ac© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
a
b
Fig. 1.4-53 Measurement and control system for color measurement and image inspection on the printed sheet. a Measuring equipment; b Monitor (CPC 24 ImageControl, Heidelberg)
curacy of the color register must lie within a range of a few hundredths of a millimeter. For setting the colors in a color set to one another on a printing press, register adjustments with increments of 1/100 mm in circumferential and lateral direction are used. The adjustment of minor register differences can be initiated from the control desk. By turning and moving the individual plate cylinders, one can make register corrections in a circumferential and lateral direction. Diagonal register adjustments (rotation of the image) are possible on some press designs which is achieved by shifting the plate cylinders (the ideal solution would be to rotate the printing plate on the plate cylinder surface). Register measurement and control systems – the majority of which analyze special register marks printed on the substrate – have been developed to bring the press more quickly and easily into register during set-up. The easiest way to check the color register is to examine a section of the image with a magnifier/optical magnifying glass (fig. 1.4-54a). If this magnifier is fitted with an additional measurement scale, the printer can assess by how much the circumferential and lateral register needs to be adjusted, should it be necessary. Special register marks printed along with the image make this process easier. These marks are positioned on the plates in such a way that, if the overprinting is done correctly, all the lines/marks for the inks/color separations concerned lie one on top of another or form © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
a
b
Fig. 1.4-54 Color register deviations. a Halftone multicolor image; b Register measuring mark
specified structures (register marks, register crosses – fig. 1.4-54b). Deviations, when enlarged with a magnifier, are identified and used for press adjustment. Automated color register measuring instruments can automatically detect,quantitatively evaluate,and display deviations for the operator. Additionally, these instruments may even initiate adjustment directly in the press. A hand-held measuring instrument of this kind is illustrated and described in figure 1.4-55. Figure 1.4-56 shows a special magnifier that consists of a camera system which displays the halftone image on the monitor.
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Fig. 1.4-55 Hand-held instrument for the measurement of color register deviations and automatic adjustment of the press by means of infrared signal transmission. a Register mark reader on the control desk of a sheet-fed offset press; b Hand-held instrument (“electronic” magnifying glass with display for color register adjustment); c Register mark for six colors for register mark reader on the printed sheet (CPC4 register mark reader, Heidelberg)
a
b
c
There are measurement systems that can be installed on both sheet-fed and web-fed presses for in-line measurement of the color register. The measurement is usually carried out on the basis of special measuring marks which are printed along with the image (sec. 2.1.4 for further information).
Fig. 1.4-56 Video magnifying glass for assessment of the color register in multicolor printing (MAN Roland)
1.4.4.3 Measurement of Gloss A gloss of a surface can be specified by means of its reflection behavior. The measurement is based on the varying scattering angles of light in accordance with the surface structure (specular or more or less diffuse reflection). So-called goniometers can take threedimensional measurements of the directional diffusion of light in great detail (indicatrix of diffusion, see fig. 1.4-57a). This complicated measuring technique, however, is only suitable for laboratory tests and not for assessing printing quality during production. Glossmeters © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
Incident light (Illumination)
Specular reflection
Scatter indicatrix Diffusely reflected light
Surface a
Receiver
Illumination
Measuring signal Ink
454
754 454
254 Paper
b Measuring aperture
Fig. 1.4-57 Basic principle of gloss measurement. a Reflection behavior of a rough surface; b Gloss measurement at specified measuring angles of a glossmeter
are limited to measuring reflected light in a few selected directions, as figure 1.4-57b shows (for example: 25°, 45°, and 75°, with illumination at an angle of 45°).
1.4.5
Surface Finishing
Coating printed sheets in-line in sheet-fed or web-fed presses or in a downstream finishing process has become increasingly important for many printed products. The following are the basic objectives of coating of printed products: • increase visual effects, particularly gloss, • protect the substrate from mechanical factors such as abrasion and scratches, • protect the substrate from penetration by liquids and gases, • optimize subsequent finishing processes. In sheet-fed offset there is a growing tendency for presses to be fitted with coating units, since the value © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
of the print can be significantly increased by applying a coating. A much greater degree of gloss can be achieved with coating than with printing inks alone. Virtually photographic quality is achieved with highgloss coating. The visual impression of the print image is essentially affected by contrasts, so that matte varnish can produce the desired effects for many layout designs as well as high-gloss varnish. For many print jobs, however, it is not the gloss that is of prime importance but rather the mechanical surface improvement, namely protection from abrasion and a defined coefficient of friction. Printed products such as folding boxes or book covers are exposed to a particularly high degree of abrasion and scratching. Appropriately formulated varnishes that offer protection from abrasion make the printed sheet surface very resistant. The properties of the coating film, such as a sealing effect against water and grease and, to a certain extent, steaming are particularly exploited in food packaging. Coatings with defined coefficients of friction play a significant part, particularly in the production of folding boxes, since they optimize the conveyance of the folding boxes to the subsequent finishing stations. Coated prints also need less powdering in the delivery to prevent offsetting. This also contributes to speedy finishing as well as to obtaining the desired glossy effects. 1.4.5.1 Characteristics of Surface Finishing Optical Effects/Gloss Gloss provides printed products with a better overall look. It increases the attention paid to the product. The color of high-gloss prints appears more intense (greater depth of color), that is, more chromatic and at the same time somewhat darker. The colorful glossy effects can be expressed more succinctly: a glossy black appears to be blacker than a matte black and a glossy red darker and more intense than a matte red. Gloss is the light reflected from the surface, whereby the angle of incidence of the light is the same as the angle of the greater part of reflection. Gloss is a characteristic of the surface of a material. The surface reflex of a pane of glass, for example, superimposes on the color image behind it, thus intensifying the color impression. The gloss reflex of an ink film or a coating has the same effect on the color appearance of a print. On an absolutely smooth surface all the gloss is reflected below the glazing angle and is only visible in this
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direction of angle. When looking at glossy print copies or packaging, the objects must be held so that the gloss does not strike the eye. Semi-matte coatings, where the light is reflected diffusely, are less dependent on the angle of observation and the potentially disadvantageous effects of specular reflection. An ideally glossy ink surface is not achieved in sheetfed offset. The film of ink is more or less semi-matte. The surface may be treated with a coating or film lamination in subsequent finishing operations. Figure 1.4-58 outlines the specular and diffuse reflection which can occur on printed and coated surfaces. Protection from Abrasion The quality of high-grade printed products can be considerably impaired by scratches on the substrate. The higher the density of the color areas in a printed image, the more noticeable scratches become. Surfaces may be subject to just as much stress in subsequent finishing processes as during transportation. Protective varnishes can be enriched with suitable abrasion protection
Fig. 1.4-58 Reflection properties of different surfaces in printing. a Reflection/Scattering of light on reflective and rough surfaces; b Scatter indicatrix on various rough surfaces; c Scatter behavior of printed papers: smooth and rough paper and varnished print image
waxes. Abrasion marks on a coating are considerably less conspicuous than scratches in the ink film. Resistance For some applications, such as packaging, labels, and banners, particular properties are required with respect to protection from environmental influences. Folding boxes, cardboard products, pouches, and paper bags are often exposed to considerable humidity. All composite fiber materials tend to absorb moisture and to lose their strength and stiffness as a result. Varnishes that lie on the surface of the substrate actually inhibit permeation of the moisture into the substrate but are penetrated if subjected to the constant effect of moisture. Longer-lasting resistance to water can only be achieved with varnishes that penetrate the fiber material. Many packaging materials need to have barrier properties against water vapors to prevent the exchange of moisture with the atmosphere. Cookies, for example, must not become soft as a result of water absorption.
Incident light
Reflected light
a Rough surface (diffuse reflection)
Smooth surface (specular reflection)
Scatter indicatrix
b Specular and diffuse reflection
Specular reflection c
Specular and diffuse
Specular
Completely diffuse reflection Additional specular reflection (smoothing effect by varnish)
diffuse
Varnish
Ink Paper
Ink on smooth paper surface
Ink on rough paper surface
Ink on paper with additional layer of varnish
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1.4 Print Quality
Varnishes applied to fiber materials can often provide adequate protection from water vapor diffusion for a certain period of time. However, absolute protection can only be achieved with film packaging (or glass, metal) or by using film-laminated fiber materials. Varnishes are used to protect the surfaces from soiling, which is particularly important in the case of packaging, labels, and paper tablecloths, among other things. Grease, oil, and water-based dispersions are more prone to penetrate fibrous substrates of this kind and form disturbing, blotchy discoloration. Varnishes of different formulations protect the cardboard, paper, or corrugated board. Cardboard packages for cakes and pastries are usually protected from the penetration of grease by the application of a coating film. Decorative articles, such as banners and streamers, must not actively aggravate any fire which might occur. Papers can be made far less inflammable when they are treated with special varnishes.
1.4.5.2 Surface Finishing Techniques
Enhancement for Finishing The coefficient of friction of a substrate is an important factor in all finishing machines, both for conveyance and for the machine settings. Die-cut boards for the production of folding boxes are frictionally engaged for the transportation on gluing machines between conveyor belts. Printed areas usually have different coefficients of friction than non-printed areas. A uniform coefficient of friction is achieved over the entire surface with the application of coating. The travel behavior of coated substrates is considerably easier to adjust on finishing machines than the behavior of printed products with varying surface characteristics. Production reliability is therefore increased and the quality improved. The powder applied to the printed sheet in sheet-fed offset presses for better sheet delivery and drying results may soil subsequent finishing machines. Coated sheets can be stacked in the sheet delivery without powder or with only a minimal application of powder. Many sheet-fed offset jobs are therefore only coated so that the application of powder can be to a large extent avoided and the job can be finished more quickly. With flexible packaging, the extremely smooth surfaces of special foil materials may be undesirable for further use. Plastic bags, for example, can easily slip around in the pile. The surface friction can be increased by overprinting with special varnishes (silicates) to offer good stacking properties.
Varnish Application. The varnish should produce a smooth and even film directly after application. The surface is still rough after the varnish has been applied and needs a short time to run smooth. On absorbent substrates the varnish will begin to penetrate the surface and lose some of its gloss as absorption progresses during this process. In many cases the gloss can be optimized by determining the most expedient time to allow between printing and drying. Differences in quality occur, depending on whether the varnish is applied to an ink film which is still wet or to a dry one. In gravure and flexographic printing, drying takes place after each printing unit, meaning that there is no fundamental difference in the product whether coating is done in-line or off-line. In sheet-fed offset, however, the oxidatively drying inks have still not dried when the sheets reach the delivery. In-line coating is therefore always performed on ink which is not yet dry. Water-based varnishes (unlike oleaginous print varnish, they are based on water) do not moisten a damp ink film as well as one that has been dried. A homogeneous, high-gloss coating of the highest quality is therefore only obtained on a thoroughly dry ink film (and substrate). This is possible if the ink is dried inline (UV inks) or coating is done off-line. Print varnish basically consists of unpigmented offset ink. It can be applied either by special coating units or the inking unit of an offset printing unit, that is, via ink fountain, inking roller system, offset printing plate
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Coating Amongst the most important types of varnish, especially in conjunction with the offset printing technology, are: • water-based varnish (dispersion varnish), • print varnish, and • UV varnish. The different varnishes are described in detail in section 1.5.3. Varnishes are applied directly to the substrate by rollers or coating forms in coating units or indirectly via intermediate carriers (e.g., print varnish from the printing plate via the blanket onto the paper). Roller and blade systems (usually chambered doctor blades in conjunction with anilox rollers) are used to meter the quantity applied (see fig. 2.1-63). The various coating units, and in-line and off-line applications, are dealt with in section 2.1.2.7.
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and blanket cylinder. The quality of the gloss is not as high with in-line coating because the print varnish mixes with the ink which is still fresh to some extent. Print varnishes tend to turn yellow and are therefore not suitable for long-life print products where waterbased varnishes are preferable. Water-based varnishes can also be applied via the inking unit and an uncoated, that is, normally hydrophilic, offset plate (e.g., aluminum surface) although the quality is limited compared to the quality achieved with a separate coating unit since only a thin coating can be applied via the inking unit of an offset press. Moreover, the varnish might build up on the rollers when it runs through the roller train creating extra cleaning work. In sheet-fed offset the desired coating quality cannot be achieved with the application of varnish alone (e.g., subject to the paper quality). The quality can usually be markedly improved by the application of a primer. The development of double coating units in sheet-fed offset made it possible to apply a primer first, dry the surface in between, and then finally apply the actual varnish (see fig. 2.1-64). One sector of application involves water-based varnishes. The capillaries in absorbent papers can be closed by the application of a primer. Extremely high gloss values are then achieved with the subsequent coating process on the sealed, already-smoothed paper surface. UV varnishes represent the second area of application. In sheet-fed offset it is necessary to be able to overprint UV varnishes on conventional, oxidatively drying inks. This can be done in a second pass (off-line), after the ink has already dried. With an optimally equipped production installation, however, UV coating should be done in-line, that is, in one pass directly after multicolor printing on the not yet dry sheet-fed offset ink. To achieve a good coating result special bonding agents are needed. They increase the surface tension between the UV varnish and the oilbased ink. The drying of the ink on the substrate is not affected by the varnish film above it. UV Varnishes. Compared to other types of varnish, UV varnishes have the advantage that very thick overcoating can also be applied in-line and a film of varnish produced that is scarcely distinguishable from film lamination. (Unlike water-based varnishes, UV varnishes do not contain any volatile constituents, so that the coating thickness of the liquid film of varnish is the same as the dry one. Also, absorption into the paper is so low as to be negligible.) In sheet-fed offset, UV coat-
ing has replaced film lamination to a great extent. Due to the high coating thickness (up to approximately 8 µm), UV varnishes attain gloss values never achieved before with water-based varnishes (coating thickness approximately 3 µm). Special Effect Varnishes. The use of varnishes for special effects is not limited merely to surface effects. Unusual designs can be achieved with inked varnishes, especially with pale background color tones. Alongside the absorbent color pigments, reflective pigments in the varnish have become a factor. The group of metallic pigments for gold (bronze pigment), silver (aluminum pigment), and metallic inks, embedded in a water-based varnish, has achieved high gloss values that could not previously be attained with varnish inks. With pearlescents the inkfilm may be given the luster characteristic of mother-of-pearl (different colors depending on which direction they are viewed from) that stand out from conventional color prints in their appearance. In screen printing it is possible to apply coatings which are so thick that the imprinted structures can be felt when touching the printed image. Special relief codes, such as Braille lettering or security features in security papers, can be imparted in this way. Applications with strong surface structures/reliefs are particulary interesting for decorative printing. The relatively expensive embossing tools used to produce the structure were replaced by much more economical application of varnish. In wallpaper printing, for instance, there are widespread examples of so-called “embossed wallpapers,” for which special screen printing inks are foamed in a hot air dryer whereby a profile is produced without embossing equipment. Cut-Outs/Spot Varnishing. Spot varnishing is used to highlight image elements by the contrast between gloss or matte varnished and unvarnished areas, which produces special color effects. Glossy items such as jewelry and accessories can be highlighted very effectively in illustrations using high-gloss coatings around matte surroundings. The surface elements of print and varnish must lie exactly over each other. In spite of there being only a slight contrast effect with highly glazing varnishes, the slightest register errors are perceived as very disturbing. The register demands on the coating forms are therefore comparable to those on printing forms. The accurate positioning of the coating plates register is not a problem with print varnish, because the same printing plate can be used as for the offset print© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.4 Print Quality
ing. Water-based and UV varnishes need a flexographic printing plate, that is, a flexible letterpress plate, which can become deformed when it is mounted onto the cylinder in the coating unit. All-round exposed plates (i.e., where the plate is mounted on a cylinder) increase the dimensional accuracy. To improve the stability the forms are stuck onto metal base plates. With commercial print jobs coating is usually applied over the entire surface without cut-outs. With folding boxes, on the other hand, some areas must stay free of coating so that the water-based adhesive can penetrate the fibrous material faster at the places where the boxes are to be stuck together. The cut-outs in the coating plates (e.g., blanket, full tone flexographic plate) required here are usually cut manually. Scented Varnishes. Alongside the visual response generated by the multicolor print with varnish coating, the sense of smell can also be stimulated. Micro-encapsulated fragrances are embedded in the varnish and reach the customer with the printed product. Once with the customer, the fragrances of the scented varnish can be activated by rubbing or just by touching, the capsules burst and the fragrances are released. Hot-Calender Varnishes. Each type of varnish (with the exception of UV varnishes) can only be applied in a limited (3–8 µm) coating thickness, meaning that varnish can never achieve the gloss values and protective properties of film lamination (film thicknesses of up to approximately 200 µm). On the other hand, film-laminated print products are not as easy to recycle and their production is more complicated and expensive. Hotcalender varnishes achieve surface smoothness that is scarcely distinguishable from that of film lamination. At the same time,the products are absolutely recyclable.The varnish (thermoplastic) can be applied and smoothed out between heated, polished calender rollers. It forms a considerably thinner film than can be obtained by lamination. In spite of all their advantages in terms of quality, hot-calender varnishes have only gained general acceptance in a few applications. Hot-calendering takes place off-line and its production costs are therefore clearly higher than those of in-line varnishing. Film Lamination Film lamination provides the highest possible gloss values and protection. Laminated films with structured surfaces are occasionally applied to create special effects. The film lamination is not dependent on the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
printing process, that is, it requires no special matching of the ink with the laminating material, that is necessary to a certain extent with varnishing (the cover of this book is film-laminated). Film-laminated materials frequently offer further functions in addition to enhancing appearance. The stiffness of cardboard makes it especially suitable for packaging drinks and liquids in combination with a liquid-resistant film that can be designed especially so that the aroma is not lost. Embossing Embossing is one of the most demanding yet most effective of all types of surface finishing. The embossed effect is achieved solely by deformation of the materials by means of a block or die, that is, the formation of a relief; that can be superimposed in film lamination after the film has been applied. The reflection on the varying structures of the embossed image changes depending on the incidence of the light. In the sheet-fed printing sector, embossing plates can be produced at a manageable cost. In web printing the production of embossing cylinders is very costly and time-intensive. Rotary embossing is therefore only done on regularly recurring products with high print volumes (e.g., wallpaper). Hot-Foil Stamping. Perfectly smooth surface elements in gold, silver, copper, aluminum and metallic colors can be transferred to the substrate by hot-foil stamping. A base film is coated with a layer providing the color and a hot-melt glue (adhesive coating layer). The image can be transferred under pressure and heat using a heated block (letterpress block). Suitable presses are letterpress machines and flat-bed die-cutters. Hot-foil stamping is primarily used for products such as packaging for cosmetics, sweets, and drinks as well as for brochure covers. In narrow-web flexographic presses embossing is often done in-line. Holograms can be transferred in the same way with conventional hot foil stamping machines. The holograms are first embossed into the foil and then applied with a coating. This foil can then be applied like a gold foil, for example, using the hot-foil stamping technique with a repeat length control. References in 1.4 [1.4-1] Schläpfer, K.: Farbmetrik in der Reproduktionstechnik und im Mehrfarbendruck. 2. Auflage. UGRA, St. Gallen 1993.
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[1.4-2] Kipphan, H.: Color Measurement Methods and Systems in Printing Technology and Graphic Arts Proceedings. SPIE, Vol. 1912 (Color Hardcopy and Graphic Arts II). The Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE), Bellingham (WA) 1993, pp. 278–298. [1.4-3] ICC Profile Format Specification. Int. Color Consortium, Vers. 3.4., Reston (VA) 1997. [1.4-4] Adobe Systems: PostScript Language Reference Manual. 2nd ed. Addison-Wesley, Reading (MA) 1990. [1.4-5] Richter, M.: Einführung in die Farbmetrik. Walter De Gruyter, Berlin 1985. [1.4-6] McDonald, R.; Smith K.J.: CIE94 – A new colourdifference formula. J. Soc. Dyers Col. Vol 111, Dec. 1995, pp. 376-379. [1.4-7] Fairchild, M.: Color Appearance Models. AddisonWesley, Reading (MA) 1997. [1.4-8] Farbe und Qualität (Colour & Quality). Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg, 1995/1999. [1.4-9] Pauckner, L.; Wild, D.: Auswirkung von Lichtfang, Farbschichtdicke und Oberflächenreflexion auf die Tonwertwiedergabe beim Rasterdruck. FOGRAForschungsbericht 4.022, München 1980. [1.4-10] Fink, P.: PostScript Screening. Adobe Press, 1992. [1.4-11] IFRA Special Report 2.13. IFRA, Darmstadt 1994.
Further Reading for 1.4.1
Green, P.: Understanding Digital Color. Graphic Arts Technical Foundation, Pittsburgh (PA) 1995. Richter, K.: Computergrafik und Farbmetrik. VDE-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1996.
for 1.4.2 Poynton, C.: Frequently asked questions about color. 1997. Internet essay at http://www.inforamp.net/˜poynton/PDFs/ColorFAQ.pdf
for 1.4.3 Green, P.: Understanding Digital Color. Graphic Arts Technical Foundation, Pittsburgh (PA) 1995. Kang, H.R.: Digital Color Halftoning. SPIE Optical Engineering Press. Bellingham (WA) 1999. Morgenstern, D.: Rasterungstechnik (fotomechanisch und elektronisch). Polygraph, Frankfurt/Main 1985. Ulichney, R.: Digital halftoning. MIT Press, 1990.
for 1.4.4 Farbe und Qualität (Colour & Quality). Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG, Heidelberg 1995/1999. Helbig, Th.: Druckqualität, Polygraph Verlag, Frankfurt/ Main 1993. Hunt, R.W.G.: Measuring Colour. 2nd ed. E. Horward, New York (NY) 1991.
Field, G.: Color and its reproduction. 2nd ed. GATF Press, Sewickeley (PA) 1999.
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1.5.1 1.5.2 1.5.2.1 1.5.2.2 1.5.2.3 1.5.2.4
1.5.1
Substrates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Structure and Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offset Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravure Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Flexographic Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Substrates
History The forerunner of paper (c. 2600 BC) was papyrus, a material made out of the papyrus plant, which grows in Africa. Thin strips cut out of the inside of the plant were laid down next to each other, pressed, beaten, and smoothed out. The actual invention of paper produced from plant fibers such as bamboo fibers or cambric grass dates back to about AD 105; recent literature refers to paper production actually dating much further back. Tsai Lun from China is accredited as the inventor. The main feature of his invention was that a new wire mesh was not required for each sheet to be molded, but that the sheet molded with a wire mesh of fine bamboo rods could be couched for drying. In AD 610, the Buddhist priest Dolyo brought it to Japan, and in AD 710 it first came into Arab hands. The Arabs mainly distributed it in Asia. Paper production started in Europe in around 1150 in Spain, 1276 in Italy, and 1338 in France. In 1990 the German paper industry celebrated its six-hundred-year anniversary of papermaking in German-speaking countries. Ulman Stromer (1329–1407), a Nuremberg tradesman and councilor,began making paper by hand for the first time on 24 June 1390 in a mill he had set up, called the “Gleismühle,”in front of the city gates. Manual paper production by craftsmen in Europe lasted for a long time – around 650 years. It was not until 1799 that Nicolas Louis Robert (1761–1828), a French mechanic, received a patent for the fourdrinier paper © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5.2.5 1.5.2.6 1.5.2.7 1.5.2.8 1.5.3
Letterpress Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Screen Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pad Printing Inks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inks for Non-Impact Printing Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varnishes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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machine which he had invented. This machine was a wooden washing vat with which it was possible to produce paper 12–15 m in length. In this process the pulp was not molded, but moved to the rotating surface of the wire screen using a rotating centrifugal wheel. It was driven manually by means of a handwheel. Basic Materials for Paper Production Whereas the Chinese, almost 2000 years ago used bast, bark, hemp, rags, and rice grass as raw materials, wood is the primary raw material in use today. In terms of volume it is also the most widely available natural product on earth. Approximately a third of the land is covered by forest. For over one hundred years wood has been the most important raw material for chemical and groundwood pulp for paper production. Table 1.5-1 gives an overview of the raw materials and fibers required to produce paper, card, and board. Wood is mechanically and/or chemically prepared for paper production. To process wood to groundwood pulp (mechanical pulp) for paper production, it must be mechanically treated by grinding (fig. 1.5-1). The bark is stripped from the wood trunks and during the subsequent grinding process they are continually pressed against a revolving grindstone under pressure (stone groundwood pulp). While water is being sprayed on simultaneously, the individual fibers are ripped out of the wood and are crushed, scored, pressed, torn off, and sheared by the grindstone surface. During a second phase of the grinding process they are further fibrillated (reduced to fibers) and ground down. The result is mechanical ground-
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Raw materials
Wood
Processing
log Fiber product
Annual plants (straw, reed, cotton, etc.)
mechanical chemical shavings shavings
groundwood refiner pulp pulp
chemical
chemical pulp
Rags (linen, hemp, etc.)
Waste paper
chemical/ mechanical
recycling process
pure cellulose fiber
recycled fiber
primary fiber End products with dominant proportion of fiber
secondary fiber
newsprint, writing paper, magazine paper, printing paper (coated, folding box card/board, uncoated), sack paper writing/printing paper (medium fine paper and paper containing wood)
Fillers (kaolin, calcium carbonate, titaniumdioxide, etc.)
banknote paper, document paper, magazine printing paper, bank paper
newsprint, simple boards, folding box card
(proportion of filler up to 30%)
(woodfree paper)
Table 1.5-1 Raw materials and processing to create paper, card and board
wood pulp. Refiner groundwood is obtained by grinding chips, a waste product of timber mills. Chemical pulp is the fiber material obtained from wood (chips) and other vegetable raw materials (e.g., annuals including hemp, jute, esparto, straw, cotton) by chemical digestion. Chemical pulps differ from groundwood pulp mainly in the fiber characteristics (they have more fibers and firmer, more supple ones) and a higher degree of whiteness. Depending on the chemical solution used for treating, the following are differentiated: • Sulfate pulp: digestion of chips in a caustic soda lye (alkaline process); • Sulfite pulp: digestion in acid (acidic process). Approximately 85% of the chemical pulp produced worldwide is sulfate pulp. It is firmer than sulfite pulp, but has a lower degree of whiteness and is produced with a lower yield. Sulfite pulp needs a longer digestion time. Chemical pulp washing, bleaching, draining, drying, and packing follow after the actual digestion process. Chemical pulp, which is bleached entirely without chlorine, is designated “TCF” (Totally Chlorine Free). Instead, most common oxygen and hydrogen peroxides are used. Groundwood pulp and chemical pulp fibers are referred to as primary fibers. Waste paper also has always played an important part in paper production. Back in
1774 Justus Claproth, a Göttingen scholar, published a brochure printed on paper, for which printed paper had been used as a raw material. Today paper is manufactured using up to about 60% of waste paper in its production. However, special paper can consist of up to 100% of these so-called secondary fibers (e.g., for newspaper printing). Thus waste paper has become the most important raw material source in paper production. However,the use of these recycled fibers obtained from waste paper is limited. On the one hand, their quality must meet the requirements of the paper quality to be produced, on the other, the chemical and technical expense and the high production costs involved in this must be taken into account. In the process of obtaining secondary fibers from waste paper, a work-intensive cleaning process and suspension, as well as deinking, that is removing the printing ink, and fractionating (structuring according to fiber lengths) are required. In addition it must be noted that there are limits to the reuse of waste paper fibers. According to current research and development one can assume that the fibers are unusable after being recycled 3–5 times. A continual supply of fresh wood or primary fibers is essential for paper production [1.5-1]. Paper Production Pulp Preparation. Material preparation is required before the pulp suspension is fed to the paper ma© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5 Print Media Materials
1 2 3 4
Grindstone Wood supply Pressing pieces Press cylinder
5 6 7 8
Closing plates (open/closed) Trough (vat) Spraying water Outlet 2
7
5 4
a
1
7
2 5 3
3
4
8
7
6
Fig. 1.5-1 Production of groundwood pulp. a Principal structure of a magazine grinding unit; b Production plant (Stora Feldmühle)
b
chine for paper production. This includes a wide range of processes starting with preparation of the pulp, additives, and paper auxiliary agents and ending in front of the paper machine headbox. This includes the pulp grinding treatment and the supply of fillers (kaolin and calcium carbonate) and additives. The basic properties and quality characteristics of the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
paper are substantially determined in this way. The final composition of the ready pulp suspension takes place in the so-called paper stock vat where the required fillers and additives are also supplied. The paper machine is supplied for paper production with the ready “material” (material suspension) from the paper stock vat.
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Paper Machine. Production of paper and card mainly takes place on modern high-speed paper machines today. In Germany alone there are about four hundred very different types of machines, which continually manufacture in different working widths and various speeds in so-called continuous operation. Machines for
producing higher paper quality are available for working widths of 6.60 m and above, and speeds of 1300 m/min (21.7 m/sec). Paper machines are at the heart of every paper factory. The so-called fourdrinier paper machines with endless wire are the most widespread. Figure 1.5-2 shows the
Length 120 m Production flow Web formation by pressing between wires (wire section with top and bottom wires)
Headbox for distribution of the fiber suspension a
Dewatering by pressing with felts
Drainage by suction with wires
Specifications: Basis weight Web width Speed Production capacity Paper reel weight
Drying on heated cylinders
Calendering with hard-/soft-nip calenders
Longitudinal slitting, winding-up system
40–50 g/m2 9m 28 m/s 190000 t/year 60 t
Fig. 1.5-2 Fastest paper machine for the production of newsprint in 1997, example of a fourdrinier paper machine (Voith Sulzer Paper Technology, Germany, 1997). a Diagram showing production stages; b Picture of the paper machine. Basis weight 40 to 50 g/m2, web width 9 m, speed 28 m/s, production capacity 190000 t/a, weight of the paper reel 60 t.
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1.5 Print Media Materials
production of newsprint with the following machine components (for other types of paper, additional components must be supplied according to requirements): • • • • • •
headbox, wire section, press section, dryer section, calender, winding unit with longitudinal slitting.
The pulp is routed through the headbox to the endless wire. The paper web is formed at the wire section. This happens by draining (filtration), that is, by separating water and solids. As soon as the fiber suspension of water, fibers, fillers, and additives has run uniformly from the headbox to the wire (mesh net) at a high speed, the water flows off through the wire due to gravity. The fibers remain on the wire and become felted into a continuous web. This process is referred to as “drainage.” A slight jogging motion is exerted on the wire. In this way the longitudinal orientation of the fibers parallel to the direction of flow, which causes the characteristic grain direction of the paper, is somewhat reduced and at the same time supports the draining and felting. Sheet paper is cut out of web material. Differentiation is made between long grain (fiber orientation parallel to the length side) and short grain (fiber orientation parallel to the narrow side of a sheet). The running direction of the completed paper (fig. 1.5-3) is particularly important for a lot of printing work in view of the stability of the paper, as the individual fibers expand more in width than in length (up to a ratio of 7:1) when moistened. This characteristic must be taken into account for printing and finishing. Additionally the stiffness and strength of the paper are greater in the fiber direction than across it. The function of the dandy roll (not shown in the paper machine depicted), which is a screen mesh cylinder running on the fourdrinier wire, is to evenly form the upper side of the wet web. Marks that are embossed or soldered into the dandy roll wire leave an impression – watermarks (see also fig. 2.5-10) – while rotating into the wet web. Elevations result in light watermarks, and sinks (from compaction of pulp) in dark watermarks, also referred to as “light shade watermarks”. At the end of the wire section, the bridging of the paper web, which is still wet, takes place over the couch press into the so-called press section, also referred to as wet pressing. This is where further mechanical draining and compaction of the paper web takes place. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
In the dryer section, the paper web undergoes a long gentle drying process against drying cylinders heated by steam. The type of drying has an effect on the strength of the paper and how it stretches. Before the last third of the dryer section there is a size press (fig. 1.5-4), with which surface sizing (increasing the wet-strength) or also light pigmentation (coloring) of the paper web can take place, if this is required for the paper type. Modern size presses are referred to as “film presses”, and they provide a precise dosage of the volume of coating. The calender is part of the end section of a paper machine. Its function is to mechanically even out or reduce slight irregularities and the roughness of the paper. With a dry calender, such as one that consists of five to ten ground steel rollers arranged above one another, “machine finished”, matte, or slightly machine finished paper can be produced. A cooling system is located after the drying section. Production of the paper ends with the winding of the paper web onto a steel core referred to as a reel drum. Whereas on fourdrinier paper machines the fiber suspension is deposited on the fourdrinier wire for paper formation, on cylinder paper machines it is “molded” by circular calenders rotating in the pulp. In this process drainage takes place by the water running off into the inside of the circular calender. Cylinder paper machines are used for producing multi-ply paper or card which can consist of up to ten individual layers. In this process the individual layers are transferred and brought together (couched) by aligning several circular colanders within the cylinder paper machine on the revolving endless couch felt (fig. 1.5-5). Paper Finishing The most frequently used processes for paper finishing are: • coating, • impregnating, • parchmentizing, • laminating. The most important finishing process for paper today is coating (fig. 1.5-6). This means machine coating of a base paper with one or several layers of a white pigment coating that consists of: • pigments, • vehicles (binders), • additives (e.g., optical additives).
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Fig. 1.5-3 Running direction of paper during production. a Sheet cut from the paper web (indicating direction of grain/fibers); b Position/running direction of the sheet in the offset printing press showing the stretch-direction (less expansion under influence of moisture in direction of grain, preferred folding in direction of grain)
Long grain a > b
a
Width of the paper web (direction of stretch) At right angles to direction of grain
Direction of grain/fibers
b a
Running direction or longitudinal direction of the paper web (grain orientation) Short grain a < b Width of the paper web sheet a b
Running direction or longitudinal direction of the paper web
Expansion of a printed sheet in long grain format (a > b) under pressure and influence of moisture (Less paper stretch crossways to the direction of print)
b
a
b Running direction of the sheet in the printing press
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1.5 Print Media Materials
Form rollers
Application system for coating liquid
Fig. 1.5-4 Functional diagram of a size press for online surface sizing of paper or card on both sides in a paper machine. Special application systems meter the size on the rollers. The size is transferred to both sides of the web in the roller nip (the point of contact between rollers and paper web). [1.5-1]
The function of the vehicles of a coating color is to finely distribute pigments in the coating color and to bind them to the paper. Depending on the printing process for which the type of paper is to be used and the printing quality to be produced, there are many different vehicle formulae.
Fig. 1.5-5 Functional diagram of a cylinder paper machine for manufacturing multi-ply board [1.5-1]
The paper coating is used deliberately in order to influence the paper surface with regard to lightness/color and structure/roughness – for example, to produce glossy, half-matte (satin gloss) or matte surfaces for better printability. Printing results can be achieved that are not possible on uncoated natural paper. The base paper is matched to the different requirements of the printing process through the composition of the coating material. After coating the paper, calendering can take place (giving the surface a satin finish). This is how the paper obtains its final surface structure (gloss and glaze) and thus also its visual impression as well as printability properties. Calendering takes place in a calender in which the paper web is mechanically routed between rollers that are located above one another under pressure, friction, and warmth. Paper or card obtain special structures, that is, fine and coarse or hammertone embossing in an embossing calender. Today such a large variety of coated and cast-coated paper of very different properties is available for use in all printing processes that it is hard to obtain an overview. With cast-coated paper the mirror finish surface is not produced by calendering, but after the coating by contact drying which follows immediately against a hot chrome cylinder. In this way the coating undergoes plastic deformation and the surface structure of the extremely smooth chrome cylinder is transferred to the paper or card surface [1.5-1, 1.5-2].
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1 Screen cylinder 2 Trough with fiber suspension 3 Couch roller 4 Couch felt 7
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Idler roller Pressure roller Guide roller Paper web
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a
Cast-coating method 1 Application unit 2 Paper web, uncoated 3 Impression roller 4 Paper web, precoated on one side 5 Cast-coating cylinder 6 Paper web, cast-coated on one side
Roller coating method (both sides) 1 Sump 2 Inking rollers 3 Spreading and distribution rollers 4 Application rollers 5 Uncoated web 6 Impression cylinder 7 Paper web, coated on one side 8 Drying 9 Paper web, coated on both sides
Blade coating method 1 Paper web, uncoated 2 Cylinders enclosed in a rubber layer 3 Coating sump 4 Application roller for the coating color 5 Blade 6 Paper web, coated on one side
6 5 3
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8 3
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Winding unit
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Production flow
Drying second side
3 5
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Completed reel
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Drying (infrared or hot-air 1st side suspension drying)
1st coating head (coating application) Measuring equipment
2nd cylinder section (contact drying)
Supply roll 1st cylinder section 2nd coating head Measuring (contact drying) (coating application) frame Unwinding unit (base paper for coating)
Fig. 1.5-6 Paper finishing by coating. a Principles of the coating process; b Functional diagram of a modern coater for paper coated on both sides (blade coating process). Production speed: 500–1000 m/min
Structure Type Paper is a flat material produced from plant fibers that are mechanically or chemically treated or thermo-mechanically treated with chemicals. It is a tabular structure generated by natural agglutination and felting of fibers and having a grammage (surface related mass) of 7 g/m2 up to about 150 g/m2. The following are differ-
entiated: uncoated paper, coated paper, and cast-coated paper (high finish gloss). The pulp composition of paper gives information about its quality determined by the raw material (see also table 1.5-1). Paper is divided into:
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1.5 Print Media Materials
• • • •
Uncoated Paper The names “paper,” “card,” and “board” on the one hand depend on the grammage, but on the other are also related to their application. The following reference values and typical applications apply to:
woodfree, containing wood, containing waste paper, containing rag.
Woodfree paper is mainly produced from chemical pulp fibers and must contain a maximum of 5% groundwood pulp. For example, a lot of printing and writing paper as well as uncoated paper and finished paper with a coated surface is woodfree paper. Paper containing wood is produced by using a high proportion of mechanical pulp (groundwood pulp). Paper containing wood still contains a large proportion of lignin (lignified and robust part of the wood) so that it yellows relatively quickly. Examples of paper containing a lot of wood are newsprint and magazine paper which are increasingly produced by using waste paper (secondary fibers/deinked fibers). In general the proportion of mechanical pulp is not always precisely indicated. For this reason the designations “containing some wood” or “almost woodfree” are used. Paper containing waste paper (recycled paper) is increasingly available today. For example, newsprint is produced from nearly 100% secondary fibers [1.5-1].
Table 1.5-2 Types of uncoated paper for web offset printing and gravure printing – general properties and application [1.5-1]
• Paper < 150 g/m2 (sometimes up to 400 g/m2), (thin paper up to cover); • Card 150–600 g/m2 (cardboard for folding boxes); • Board > 600 g/m2 (cardboard and corrogated board for heavy packaging). The types and quality features of uncoated reel paper (natural paper rolls) for web-offset and gravure are stated in table 1.5-2. Additional types of uncoated paper of varying composition and character that are printed partly in sheet-fed printing as well as in webs for continuous form printing [1.5-1] are as follows: • offset paper, • recycled paper (consisting of up to 100% secondary fibers),
Designation
General quality characteristics and application
WSOP paper
Web Special Offset Paper containing wood, uncoated, calendered paper.
SC-A paper
Super Calendered: Uncoated paper (containing wood) with a lot of glaze from calendering.
SC-B paper
Newsprint paper with surface glaze produced by Soft-NipCalender. Also referred to as “improved newsprint paper.”
B pulp paper
Uncoated, calendered paper for web offset printing. Pulp composition: chemical pulp, groundwood pulp, and filler. The whiteness is fixed.
NP paper
Uncoated paper mainly produced from secondary fibers (waste paper). “Standard” and “improved” are differentiated. Grammage: 39 – 50 g/m2. The glaze, absorbency, dyeing, and opacity are particularly important for printability. Continuous paper: From woodfree to thatcontaining some wood, and also with a more or less high proportion of secondary fiber, worked, uncoated paper for text and data processing. The properties are defined in DIN 6721 (German Industry Standard).
SC-HSWO paper
Super Calendered Heavy Special Web Offset Paper: calendered, uncoated paper with a large grammage
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• thin letter paper (air mail paper/onion skin paper), • watermark paper, • letter paper (bank paper/typewriter paper), • book paper (usually with large volume/thickness), • banknote paper (mostly with watermarks), • transparent paper, • ink jet paper (specially for ink jet printers), • special papers for electrophotography. Coated and Cast-Coated Paper Table 1.5-3 gives an overview of the classification of paper coated on both sides for sheet fed offset printing, for web offset and rotogravure printing (the terms correspond generally to common technical everyday language; official or standardized definitions are not
Table 1.5-3 Papers coated on both sides which are suitable for sheet-fed, web-fed offset and web gravure printing – general properties and application [1.5-1]
available). The paper thickness can be derived approximately from the paper grammage normally given: 100 g/m2 corresponds approximately to 0.1 mm thickness. Card. Card (cardboard) is a tabular material consisting mainly of plant fibers. As regards its grammage it can be classified as paper as well as board. Grammage of card: 150 g/m2–600 g/m2. The most important uncoated card qualities can be surface-treated and/or pigmented. Folding Boxboard. Folding boxboard is the generic term for all types of card which are suitable for producing folding boxes. Folding boxboard must have defined quality characteristics for printability, finishing,
Designation
General quality characteristics and application
Cast-coated paper
Paper with a mirror or glossy finish surface and large volume. Mainly white on one side and colored. Used especially for labels, envelopes, and high-quality folding boxes. Grammage 70–400 g/m2.
Original coated art paper
Best quality coated paper. Thick coating layer gives high degree of uniformity. Excellent printability and pressroom runnability.
Specially coated illustration printing paper
Coated paper for demanding and high-quality printing jobs. Glossy, half matte, or matte on both sides. Quality is very consistent. Best printability and pressroom runnability.
Standard illustration Good quality paper coated on both sides. printing paper Ordinary illustration Paper coated on both sides for simple printing work, limited printing paper quality with regard to gloss and evenness of the print image. MWC/HWC paper
Medium Weight Coated Paper/Heavy Weight Coated Paper Paper containing wood with grammage range of 80–130 g/m2.
LWC paper
Light Weight Coated Paper. Paper widely used for mass print runs in web offset printing. LWC paper range goes up to 72 g/m2.
LLWC/ULWC paper
Light Light Weight Coated Paper Ultra Low Weight Coated Paper Ultralight coated paper below 45 g/m2, used in particular in web offset printing and gravure for printing international magazines and mail-order catalogs.
FC paper
Film Coated Papers. Paper which is coated or pigmented on both sides in a super size press (film press) within the paper machine with a coating volume metered on rollers, thus avoiding swamping. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5 Print Media Materials
and subsequent processing. All types of folding boxboard are produced on the card-making machine from several pulp webs (plies) in one operation: • the front cover ply, • one or several single layers/or plies, • the back cover ply. The thickness ratio of the layers to one another is approximately as follows: front cover 25%, single plies (55%), back cover 20%. Cast-coated folding boxboard (CC) is a card with a mirror finish and closed surface. Coated folding boxboard (C) is a card with a coated, usually gloss surface, which in contrast to uncoated card permits a significantly better print and coating result. Uncoated folding boxboard (U) is a card with an uncoated, but nevertheless relatively smooth matte surface with good printability [1.5-1, 1.5-3]. Board. The dividing lines between card, folding boxboard and board, are blurred. Board (mill board) is the generic term for all single-layer (i. e., processed and couched, multi-layer) solid board. Wet machine board and machine-made board are differentiated. The term board is usually used if the product was produced from simple raw materials (groundwood pulp and secondary fibers) and has a grammage of over 600 g/m2. Corrugated board consists of one or several layers of corrugated paper that is stuck onto one ply or between several plies of another paper or card. The most frequently used type of corrugation worldwide is the sine wave, also called round corrugated form. The corrugation can be produced in different ways. To determine the size of a corrugation, the corrugation pitch – corrugation width – and corrugation height have to be measured. The corrugation pitch is the measurement in the horizontal plane, the corrugation height is the measurement in the vertical plane from apex to apex. The different designations for corrugated board are determined by the different sizes of the corrugations [1.5-1]. Special Paper – Carbonless Copy Paper Carbonless copy paper has a special place among print media papers. It is referred to as chemical reaction paper or autocopying paper. It is very important in business form production. Production of today’s autocopying paper is based on a patent granted in 1938 in © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
the USA for the micro-encapsulation of fluids (Mead Corp.). Carbonless copy paper is supplied in various formats in white and color for sheet offset printing and in different roll widths and lengths for processing on continuous-form printing presses. Carbonless copy paper is available for producing multi-part forms set with the following designations: • CB paper (upper sheet): Coated Back. The back page of this type of sheet is coated with a layer made of micro-capsules, vehicles, and spacers. • CFB paper (middle sheet): Coated Front and Back. This type of sheet is coated both on the front and the reverse side. • CF paper (under sheet): Coated Front. This type of sheet is only provided with coating which removes the color on the upper side. • SC paper (one-sheet type): Self-Contained. The upper side of this paper is coated both with coating transferring color as well as coating which removes the color. • SC-CB paper (intermediate sheet type): Self-Contained/Coated Back: with this paper the upper side is coated with coating transferring color as well as coating which removes the color, the rear side with micro-capsules. Printing Characteristics of Paper The printing characteristics of paper and card/cardboard are differentiated according to printability and pressroom runnability. There are also paper characteristics, however, that can jointly affect the printability and pressroom runnability. In the case of printability, these are characteristics that primarily affect the optical quality of a printed product. With pressroom runnability, it is those characteristics that have an effect on the running and speed at which the sheet or web runs through the press when printing the job. Several specifications for the printability and pressroom runnability are listed in table 1.5-4 [1.5-1]. Measuring and Checking Paper and Card For checking and measuring paper and card there is a plethora of test devices, test inks, and test procedures corresponding to the specifications for printability and pressroom runability. The tests are partly standardized. Many processes have been developed by the individual paper manufacturers in order to incorporate continuous inspection of the special characteris-
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Table 1.5-4 Paper properties, in particular with effect on printability and pressroom runnability
Printability
Pressroom runability
Paper characteristics
Accepting printing ink Ink (color location/coloring) Gloss Glaze Evenness of the surface Incandescent residue (ash) Compressibility Light fastness Absorption capacity
Tear resistance Moisture expansion Breaking load Reel tightness Blistering Tearing resistance (tensile strength) Micro-blistering Tendency to web breaks Mechanical stretching (transversely and longitudinally)
Drying of the printing ink Picking resistance Absorption time Quality of cut (e.g., cavity cut) Creasing Calluses/flatness
Coating quantity Whiteness Cloudiness (mottling)
tics of their products. Above all, the countless inspection criteria and regulations concern the constitution of the type of paper and card. This does not, however, necessarily make a statement about the characteristics of a specific product for a printing process or about the later application or usage of a printing product, for instance, for labeling, forms, or folding boxes. Therefore, sample test printing devices have been developed over the years which inspect the interaction of paper with printing ink or varnishes and printability in general. By this means, the possibility exists to inspect paper and card with regard to their behavior patterns regarding printing inks, test oils, or dampening solution under precisely defined and reproducible conditions. Detailed instructions for carrying out the many inspections of paper and card are conveyed by the various norms of the German Institute for Standardization (DIN), the information leaflets of the Association of Chemical Pulp and Paper Chemists and Engineers (Zellcheming), and, increasingly, the international standards such as ISO (International Organization for Standardization) and EN (European Norms). Furthermore, there are the recognized inspection and testing methods of the FOGRA (German Research Association for Printing and Reproduction Technology e.V.) and PTS (Foundation for Paper Technology), both based in Munich. In the United States inspection is carried out in accordance with the TAPPI standards (Technical Associations of the Pulp and Paper Indus-
pH value Holes Moisture content
Free of dust
try, Atlanta). The most important inspection methods in the paper industry are listed in table 1.5-5. When inspecting and testing paper and card, it is necessary to maintain the standardized environment in accordance with DIN EN 20187/ISO 187 and also to ensure that the taking of samples is in accordance with DIN/ISO 186 [1.5-1]. With test-print presses special stresses on the paper and characteristics corresponding to the real printing process can be simulated. Under defined and reproducible conditions with low material consumption,test prints can be produced in the laboratory. There are a multitude of testprint presses that find usage in practice. In the following, two devices are shown as an example: • Multi-purpose test printing device (fig. 1.5-7). A pre-dampening unit (for dampening the paper), a hot-air dryer, and a dryer with IR and UV device are available as modules for this testing press. • Printability test device A 1-3 (fig. 1.5-8). This offers the possibility to study the interaction between printing ink and paper and to simulate the multitude of influences of an offset printing press, also taking the dampening solution into account. On multicolor testing devices it is also possible to simulate wet-on-wet printing. In addition to the standard checks and comparison options, test prints are carried out to inspect a number of other parameters, such as: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5 Print Media Materials
Table 1.5-5 Testing criteria, regulations and equipment for paper and cardboard (selection)
Inspection criteria
Inspection regulations/Inspection device
Wettability Bursting resistance Bending strength Bending resistance Abrasion Cobb test Cobb-Unger test Density (weight by volume) Thickness
FOGRA contact angle projector or inspection inks DIN 53113 or DIN 53141* Various inspection methods and regulations DIN 53112 DIN 53109* and DIN 6723* DIN 53132 FOGRA DIN 53105 FOGRA thickness measuring device or paper thickness measuring device DIN 53112 With tensile strength inspection device TAPPI T 423m-45, ISO 526 With Elrepho 2000 in accordance with DIN 53145 or ISO 2469 DIN 53130* DIN 53104/DIN ISO 536 ISO 2813; ASTM D523 and DIN 67530* information leaflet Zellcheming V 22/72 DIN 53136 Moisture test; tear test; finger-nail test; bending test ISO 5636 / TAPPI 460 m-46 and others FOGRA DIN 53146/ISO 2471 DIN 53124*; Zellcheming information leaflet V/17762; FOGRA DIN 53112 DIN 55437; scoring tester FOGRA; buckling height in accordance with Brecht DIN 6023 Various methods and devices including DIN 53126 and Zellecheming information leaflet V/15/60 and others DIN 53106 FOGRA DIN 53115
Pressure folds Initial tear resistance Fold resistance Coloring/ink Moisture expansion (%) Grammage Gloss Incandescent residue (ash) Direction of grain Air permeability Wet elongation Opacity pH value Tear length Scoring Curling Absorption capacity (Degree of bonding) Suction height Interlaminar strength Secondary tear resistance Remark: *engl. version available
• the drying time of a printing ink, • the abrasion resistance of a type of paper or the combination of paper/ink, • the gloss of a printing ink, • the color density or the color tone and yield of a printing ink, • the picking resistance of a type of paper, • the wet picking resistance of a type of paper in connection with a dampening solution, © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• the absorption time of the printing ink with a specific type of paper, • the blistering of the ink when drying in web offset printing, • mottling (uneven density of solids). Furthermore, there are manual and special printability tests. In particular refer to the relevant ISO and DIN standards.
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Fig. 1.5-7 Multi-purpose test printing device. A dampening unit is placed as a module on the left-hand side, and a hot air dryer on the right-hand side. Test print format: 40 mm wide ¥ 200 mm long. Testing can take place at a constant speed (0.1 to 12 m/s) or with acceleration. Both the contact pressure and the printing sequence interval are variable. (prüfbau Dr. Dürner GmbH)
1.5.2
Printing Inks
1.5.2.1 Structure and Requirements Structure and Components Printing inks are principally made up of: • • • •
colorants (pigments, dyes), vehicles (binders), additives, carrier substances (solvents).
Depending on the type of printing process, inks have a largely variable flow properties which ranges from extremely thin (watery), through highly viscous, up to dry (powder-like). The ink transfer mechanism and the type of drying/fixing of the ink on the substrate principally determine the structure and the components of a printing ink (fig. 1.5-9). Colorants. They are divided into:
Fig. 1.5-8 Printability testing device used for testing special interactions of certain paper/ink combinations e.g. picking tests and absorption tests. Printing disk width: 10, 20 and 32 mm. The device is comparable with a single-color printing press. Speed: 125 cm/s. (Model: A1-3, IGT)
• pigments (organically or inorganically colored, white, or black substances that are insoluble in the ink vehicle.) These are solid particles and/or molecular agglomerates that must be held in suspension in the base liquid;) • dyes (organic compounds that are dissolved in the system during application), which are present in molecular form. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5 Print Media Materials
Printing ink Components Colorants
Vehicles (Binders)
dyes (soluble)
natural and artificial resins
pigments (dispersed) …
…
Flow properties and example of inks: “aqueous” – ink jet liquid – gravure/flexographic pasty – offset powdery – electrophotography (toner) Additives agents preventing skin formation coalescing agents wetting agents biocides siccatives …
Carrier substances diluent solvent carrier liquid (for liquid toner) carrier particles (for powder toners) …
Most important tasks and components: Color Color intensity
Anchoring of the colorant on the print carrier, Drying of the ink, Bringing colorant into a printable form (dissolve-interlace-coat)
Influence of the Transport of the ink behavior colorant (e.g., drying, flow behavior, abrasion resistance, etc.)
Fig. 1.5-9 Composition of printing inks
Pigments consist of molecules that are cross-linked with one another as crystals. Normally pigments have a particle size of 0.1–2 µm. A pigment particle can consist of several million molecules. Only around 10% of the molecules lie on the surface, and it is only these molecules and a few underneath that can absorb light. Pigments disperse light and, as such, are opaque. They have a wide absorption band and are therefore not as “pure” as dyes, which possess an extremely narrow absorption band. Dye molecules are surrounded by solvents (base liquid), so that almost every molecule can absorb photons, which leads to higher color intensity and more luminous colors. Dyes have a larger range of colors. They are naturally transparent since the molecules are significantly smaller than the visible wave length of 380 nm. Pigments always require a vehicle for binding them to the substrate while dyes in most applications connect themselves directly to the substrate surface. The disadvantage with most dyes is their limited light-fastness © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
(oxidation leads to bleaching). With respect to lightfastness and stable ink impression, pigment-based inks are advantageous. Pigments as base materials are basically cheaper than dyes yet require greater expenditure when being processed into ink: dispersing agents must be added to pigments so that they do not agglomerate. Dyes are, in contrast, dissolved and do not deposit themselves in the liquid. Printing inks normally contain pigments. The most important exception is currently still those inks used in ink jet technology, but even here the trend is towards pigments (better light-fastness, less bleeding on the paper). The pigment content, depending on the color tone, is between 5% and approximately 30%. Those organic pigments which give the printing inks (process inks) the desired color (hue) are most important for the printing industry. They can be grouped into the two main categories of chromatic pigments and black pigments. The main inorganic pigments are:
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• • • •
white pigment (e.g., titanium dioxide), metal effect pigment (gold and silver bronzes), pearlescent pigment, fluorescent pigment (for daylight luminous colors).
hot embossing (details on drying in sec. 1.7). The ink must have good adhesion to the substrate. Several methods are common (also combinations):
Binders. In conventional printing processes, binders are normally resins dissolved in mineral oil. The pigments are finely dispersed in the binder. The pigment particles are then enclosed by a binder shell. The shell protects the finely dispersed particles from associating into agglomerates and being deposited. The binders dry (harden) on the substrate and thereby bind the pigments.
• The ink anchors mechanically to the substrate surface (penetrating into pores, encasing paper fibers); here, a certain pressure between ink carrier (e.g., blanket for offset printing processes) and substrate is required and/or • The ink penetrates into the substrate surface by capillary action (e.g., ink jet). • In the case of extremely smooth surfaces, the ink is held by means of polar interaction (chemical/physical effects) between the ink and substrate.
Additives. The type of additive is dependent on the respective printing process.Additives are added to the ink in particular to influence drying, flow behavior, and abrasion resistance.
Manufacture of Printing Inks Taking the example of a sheet-fed offset ink, the manufacturing process of the printing ink is depicted roughly in figure 1.5-10.
Carrier Substances. Carrier substances for the colorants in conventional printing processes are on the one hand thinning agents such as mineral oils and on the other, insofar as available, solvents (e. g., toluene in gravure printing). The special features of non-impact printing technologies such as electrophotography and ink jet are dealt with in greater detail in section 1.5.2.8.
Rheological Characteristics of Inks. The setting of the “consistency” of a printing ink has a decisive influence on the productivity and quality of a print job. The “consistency” can be classified into various individual properties and should be adjusted to match specific printing presses, substrates, printing subjects, speed, and so forth, as optimally as possible. The most important terms are:
Requirements for the Printing Inks Printing inks must be transported from a reservoir and then in a printing-process-specific manner onto the substrate. The ink transfer can take place through:
• Dynamic viscosity h (tackiness) which can be termed as the inner resistance to the flow of the ink. The more viscous an ink, the less easily it flows and the more difficult it is for it to spread into a film. The unit of mass is Pa · s (Pascal second) or cP (centi Poise) = 1 mPa · s (milliPascal second). See also table 1.5-6 with information on the viscosity of individual inks. • Thixotrophy is the characteristic of changing viscous inks from a high viscosity (in the case of nonmoving ink) into a significantly lower viscosity (when stirring). • Tack of an ink characterizes the splitting property of an ink film, for instance, between two inking rollers. The greater the tack, the more heat is produced in the roller inking unit, and the greater the tendency for fibers/particles to pull out from the paper surface. On the other hand, a higher level of tack improves the adhesion of the ink to the image elements of the printing plate or the blanket (printed image sharper).
• ink splitting (offset, gravure, and letterpress printing): inking rollers, printing plate, and blanket (in offset) transfer/transport the ink film; • direct ink film transfer from a base foil onto the substrate (hot embossing, thermotransfer); • pressing the ink through openings (screen printing); • spraying on the ink in the form of droplets without making direct contact with the substrate (ink jet). The inks must dry or cure on the substrate. Here, differentiation is basically made between physical (absorption, evaporation) and chemical drying (oxidation, radiation curing) procedures.Very often a combination of the drying processes is applied. Solidification drying represents a special characteristic whereby inks are fluid in a hot state and then solid after cooling, for instance,
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1.5 Print Media Materials
Colorants pigments, dyes, fillers
+
Additives
Dispersion dissolver
Distribution 3-roller unit, bead mill
+
Homogenizing dissolver
Homogenizing 3-roller unit
Ink ready for dispatch filling, packing
Varnish dissolving, boiling
Vehicles (Binders) natural and artificial resins, substitute material greases, oils, etc.
Carrier substance mineral oils or e.g., soya bean oil
Fig. 1.5-10 Producing ink for sheet-fed offset printing
• “Shortness” is understood to be the flowability of an ink when a certain shearing force acts upon it. The physical forces between pigment particles and the higher molecular vehicle components determine whether an ink is “short” or “long.” Very short inks cannot easily be pumped or exhibit bad flow characteristics in the ink fountains. However, they have little tendency to drip and contribute to a sharper print image and less ink misting. Radiation-Curing Inks (UV, electron beam). The advantages of these inks are essentially • “abrupt” (1–100 ms) drying or curing so that immediate finishing of the print is possible, • free of solvents, • no drying in the inking unit or on the rollers (thus less need for cleaning of the inking units), • zero or only minimal heating of the substrate, • high mechanical stability and chemical resistance. The disadvantages are that • these inks cost more than conventional printing inks, • dryer design is at a high technical level, • increased ink handling demands for reasons of health and safety. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
The drying of these inks is dealt with in more detail in section 1.7. UV Inks (curing through ultraviolet radiation, wavelength approximately 100–380 nm). UV curing printing inks have a completely different structure than conventional printing inks. They are predominantly used in the printing of non-absorbent materials such as plastics and metal sheets, but also for high-grade card products and labels. There are UV inks for all conventional printing technologies as well as for the ink jet technology. UV curing printing inks are made up of: • • • • •
monomers, prepolymers/oligomers, pigments, additives, photo-initiators/synergists.
UV inks therefore contain no volatile substances. The monomers are liquid and are used for adjusting the processing viscosity. Together with the prepolymers they form the binder system (fig. 1.5-11). During UV exposure, prepolymers/oligomers react with the monomers, becoming three-dimensional cross-linked polymers. The photo-initiators decompose to radicals during UV exposure and trigger the polymerization. The radicals create further radicals in a chain reaction and
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Electrostatics extracts toner particles from base liquid
Electrostatic (powder film)
Pressing ink through holes in the screen
Anchoring, melting (+ pressure) Evaporating base fluid
Melting (+ pressure)
Dependent on ink type
10–20 mPa · s (dispersion), 1–3 1m
Powder, 5–10 1m
Dependent on the mesh width up to about 12 1m
50–150 Pa · s, 0.5–1.5 1m
Table 1.5-6 Properties of different types of ink in the printing process (continued on next page)
2–5% in ready-for-use mixture, 25 % concentrated
100%
Dependent on ink type
90–100%
100 %
20–30%
100%
5–8 1m
0.05–0.5 Pa · s, 0.8–1 1m Up to 2.5 1m
25%
100%
90–100%
Proportion of ink to be cured on the substrate
0.05–0.2 Pa · s, 0.8–1 (2) 1m
40–100 Pa · s (pasty), 0.5–1.5 1m
Dynamic viscosity*(h), layer thickness on the substrate
* Dynamic viscosity h: Pa · s (Pascal seconds) or 1 mPa · s (milliPascal seconds) (For example: water = 1 mPa · s; honey = 1 Pa · s)
• Liquid toner
Electrophotography • Dry/Powder toner
• UV (curing)
Screen printing • Solvents
Absorption and cross-linking
Ink splitting Pressure approx. 10 MPa in the contact zone
Letterpress printing
Radiation cross-linking
Evaporation of solvents (H2O/Toluene),
Radiation cross-linking
Physically: Absorption, Chemically: cross-linking/ oxidation
Drying
Evaporation of solvents (H2O, alcohol, etc.) Radiation cross-linking
Ink splitting, emptying of cells Pressure approx. 3 MPa in the contact zone
Ink splitting Pressure about 1 MPa in contact zone (nip)
Transfer mechanism in the printing process
Flexographic printing • Solvent Ink splitting Pressure approx. 0.3 MPa • UV in the contact zone (curing)
• UV (curing)
Gravure printing • Solvent
• UV/EB (curing)
Offset • Oil-based
Printing process (Ink type)
Elimination of of the base fluid
High layer thickness
Versatile application, Low quality
Slow drying
Medium quality Solvent recycling High ink layer thickness possible, Better quality
Thick ink layers possible
Absorbent paper Solvent recycling
Rapid drying
Slow drying, high print quality
Comments
134 1 Fundamentals
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Pressure impulse Drop volume 20–30 pl
Pressure impulse Drop volume 10–30 pl
Ink drop jet, splitting up into drops of 5–100 pl for printing
– Hot-melt (Pigments in melted polymers/ wax, 80–100 4C)
– UV (Pigments in liquid monomers, etc.)
• Continuoustechnology (dyes in solvent, water, MEK, etc.)
Evaporation/absorption
Radiation cross-linking
Hardening through cooling
Evaporation/absorption
Evaporation/absorption
Drying
1–5 mPa · s, < 0.5 1m
15–30 mPa · s, 10–20 1m
10–30 mPa · s, 12–18 1m
5–20 mPa · s, < 0.5 1m
1–5 mPa · s, < 0.5 1m
Dynamic viscosity*(h), layer thickness on the substrate
Table 1.5-6 (continued) Properties of different types of ink in the printing process
* Dynamic viscosity h: Pa · s (Pascal seconds) or 1 mPa · s (milliPascal seconds) (For example: water = 1 mPa· s; honey = 1 Pa· s)
Pressure impulse ("diaphragm/pump") Drop volume 4–30 pl
Pressure impulse Drop volume 6–30 pl
Transfer mechanism in the printing process
• Piezo technology (DoD) – conventional (dyes/ pigments in base fluid, oil or water)
Ink Jet • Thermal technolgy (DoD) (dyes/ pigments in base fluid, water)
Printing process (Ink type)
< 5%
100%
100%
5%
3–5%
Proportion of ink to be cured on the substrate
Avoiding bleeding in the paper by means of special coating
Thick ink layer on non-absorbent substrates
Thick ink layer, sensitive to scratching
Avoiding bleeding in the paper by means of special coating
Avoiding bleeding in the paper by means of special coating
Comments
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Liquid binder (vehicle) with monomers, prepolymers and photo-initiators Monomers Prepolymers
Photo-initiators UV radiation
The photo-initiators break apart into radicals under UV radiation Radicals
The released energy of the radicals affects the complete polymerization of the monomers and prepolymers Fig. 1.5-11 UV ink curing [1.5-8]
react with the monomers and prepolymers under formation of a cross-linked structure. The colorants and additives used in UV curing printing inks correspond approximately to those of other printing inks. In general, when processing UV inks and varnishes, care must be taken so that no so-called aerosol droplets (ink mist) form during splitting of inks or varnishes. The droplets can soil the press and leak into the air of the surrounding area. Among other things, ink fogging is dependent on the printing velocity, the binder, the design of the inking and coating units, and the temperature. Due to the photo-initiators, the UV ink has a specific odor that recedes strongly after the hardening
of the ink. However, the odor is trapped in the image. Systems based on cationic curing are more favorable than radical systems in terms of odor produced, but also take longer to dry. It is better for varnish since there is less tendency to fissuring. EB Inks (curing by electron beam). With EB inks, photo-initiators can be omitted since the electron beams act directly upon the reactive binder. High ink film thickness can be cross-linked since the electron beams penetrate deeply and the influences of the pigments on curing are minimal. Special Inks: Metallic/Pearlescent. A special position among the printing inks has been earned by those printing inks manufactured using metal pigments, iridescent pearl effect pigments, or interference pigments. These printing inks are also called gold and silver printing inks, or inks that demonstrate a metal-like character. Gold bronze pigments are obtained from ground brass alloys with a varying proportion of copper and zinc. The higher the copper content in the alloy, the redder the gold bronze. The technology used in the manufacture of bronzes enables the particle sizes of the metal pigments to be adapted to the respective printing technology. For offset printing this is 3.5 µm; for gravure and flexographic printing 8–9 µm (the ink film thickness is therefore considerably higher than is usual with conventional inks/pigments (0.1–3 µm). For the manufacture of silver pigments, aluminum with a purity of 99.5% is assumed. After melting in induction furnaces, the liquid molten mass is lacerated by a compressed air stream. The end product is a metal granulate with a metallically polished surface. These inks dry like a normal offset printing ink by absorption and oxidation. The latest developments are gold and silver printing inks which are built up on water-dilutable dispersion varnishes and are transferred via coating units with a chambered blade system (sec. 2.1.2.7). These inks dry by absorption into the substrate and evaporation of the water contained in the ink. They have a clearly higher brilliance than the normal gold and silver printing inks which are based on varnish. Inks with pearlescent effect pigments enable a characteristic gloss of the printed image comparable to the iridescent gloss of pearls. These pigments possess a mica core which is encased by one or more metal oxide layers. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
1.5 Print Media Materials
Printing inks with metal pigments are also used in gravure and flexographic printing. The structure of these inks is identical to that of organic or inorganic color pigments. Silver-metallic printing inks which are mixed with colored inks in any proportion are classified as satin inks. Color metal gloss inks are the result [1.5-5 to 1.5-7]. 1.5.2.2 Offset Printing Inks For offset printing, highly viscous, pasty inks are necessary (dynamic viscosity h = 40–100 Pa · s). The ink must be structured in such a way that the drying components in the ink do not harden while being spread over the rollers in the inking unit or at the subsequent transfer stations such as the printing plate and blanket. Furthermore, the printing ink for conventional offset printing (with dampening solution and ink) must be able to “store” a certain portion of dampening solution which is taken up via contact with the plate or directly via the dampening unit. (In waterless offset printing on the other hand, silicone oil can be added to the ink to ensure that the non-printed image areas are not inked.) In offset printing extremely thin ink films of approximately 0.5–1.5 µm thickness are transferred onto the substrate. Offset inks are made up of the following components (weight proportions): • The varnish (binding agent) consists essentially of hard resins (20–50%) with a high proportion of colophon, alkyd resins (0–20%), and proportions of vegetable oils (0–30%) such as linseed oil, soya bean oil, and wood oil, as well as mineral oils (20–40%) and various drying agents (< 2%). • Depending on color, the proportion of pigment (coloring agent) lies between 10 and 30%. • Additives have a proportion of up to about 10%. The following are classed as additives: – drying catalysts (combinations of cobalt, manganese and other metals), – waxes for improving the abrasion resistance and slip properties, – agents for preventing premature drying and skin formation on the surface in the can or in the ink fountain, – silicone oils for printing inks used in waterless offset printing. Due to the multitude of requirements on the finished printed product and the nature of the substrates, the percentage content of the individual ink components © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
varies considerably. Furthermore, the particular printing requirements of offset printing must be taken into account when composing the printing ink. With offset printing inks, the following are of particular significance: • high transparency (due to the subtractive mixing of inks with overprinting); • characteristics for printability and pressroom runability such as flow properties, drying, brilliance/gloss, emulsification (combined effect of ink and dampening solution), pile behavior, abrasion resistance; • ink acceptance of the substrate, and, in overprinting, the suitability to wet-on-wet printing. Based on these requirements, an entire range of ink classes is offered for offset printing. They can be classified as shown in table 1.5-7. 1.5.2.3 Gravure Printing Inks The essential difference between gravure and offset printing ink is the viscosity. Gravure requires a liquid ink (h = 0.05–0.2 Pa · s, even as low as 0.01 Pa · s in publication gravure printing), which can fill the image forming cells of the gravure cylinder at high print speed. The gravure inking unit is the “shortest” inking unit (shortest path for the ink from the ink fountain onto the paper) of all inking units used with conventional printing technologies. It consists only of an ink feeding chamber that supplies the printing plate directly with ink, and a doctor blade. This is a closed system, which permits the use of a very low viscosity ink (fig. 2.2-14 in sec. 2.2.1.5). Gravure inks are simpler in composition and manufacture compared to offset inks from a process point of view. The range of workable inks is very large, for instance, inks for obtaining a coating thickness greater than 2 µm, or inks with special metal pigments. The chemical composition of the inks permits greater variation in principle due to the direct ink transfer. Solvents are particularly important in gravure – they ensure the low viscosity of the ink and they also change the pigment concentration/optical ink density. The following factors are important for selecting solvents: • • • •
boiling point, evaporation number, flash point, explosion limit,
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Table 1.5-7 Ink categories in offset printing – their properties, areas of application and drying methods involved [1.5-4]
Ink class
Characteristics, usage, and type of drying
Universal or standard inks
Can be used universally on single or multicolor sheet offset presses. They are in line with normal demands with respect to brilliance and abrasion resistance and dry-through absorption (physically) and by oxidation (chemically). Usage on uncoated paper and coated qualities. With IR radiation and hot air, the oxidation and absorption of the inks can be accelerated.
Glossy inks/ high gloss inks
Printing inks that attain a high gloss on coated paper. Prerequisite is the use of glossy or highly glossy coated paper. The drying occurs through absorption and oxidation. With IR radiation and hot air, the oxidation can be accelerated.
Printing inks with good abrasion resistance
Abrasion-resistant printing ink ranges are especially used for printing packaging and matte coated paper. Drying is through rapid absorption and oxidation. With IR radiation and hot air, the oxidation can be accelerated.
Printing inks for waterless offset printing
Printing inks that are used if the prerequisites for waterless offset printing are met by means of special inking unit temperature control, and where suitable printing plates are available. Inks should be used without additives since viscosity changes can cause scumming. The inks are very similar to normal offset printing inks in their composition.
Low-odor printing inks
Printing ink ranges for printing food packaging. They have a special vehicle structure, but their properties are comparable with conventional printing inks.
Foil inks
Printing inks that dry purely through oxidation and have to be used if the substrate has no absorption capacity, such as metallic papers and plastic foils.
Heat-set inks for web offset printing
Printing inks for web offset printing with predominantly hot air drying. The mineral oils contained in the vehicle are of a special type that vaporizes through the heating effect of the dryer. Drying takes place physically. The correspondingly adapted ink type is offered for the most diverse kinds of paper.
Web offset newspaper printing inks (cold-set inks)
Special printing inks for printing on newsprint. They consist of a combination of various mineral oils and/or vegetable oils, the pigment (especially carbon black), and various additives such as waxes, cross-linking agents, mineral fillers, and oil-tolerant, gel-forming agents. These are to meet special quality demands such as flowability and to prevent setting-off and show-through as much as possible. Web offset newspaper printing inks dry physically by absorption into the paper.
UV inks
Frequently used in packaging and label printing. The material of the inking rollers must be adapted in order to avoid disadvantageous changes of the roller covering through the special components of UV inks, especially also for hybrid operation or just UV. Suitable wash-up fluids must be used. Hardly any restrictions to the printing plates. For waterless offset printing, UV drying inks are also available.
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1.5 Print Media Materials
• odor, • work safety, • ecological compatibility. Completely different solvents have to be used for publication gravure and gravure package printing. This is mainly because of the very varied requirements of individual packaging. The most important solvents for publication gravure are: • toluene (pure toluene with a benzene content of σFl Wetting
Q = 0° σSol >> σFl Spreading
Wetting angle Surface tension of the solid (carrier) Surface tension of the fluid (water)
Fig. 2.1-2 Wettability of surfaces and wetting angles
where an exact separation of printing and non-printing areas on the plate is not achieved when inking. The perfect offset printing process depends on many chemical and physical specifics of the materials and components involved in the process. The most important are given in the following list: • Influence of the printing plate – surface tension of the ink-accepting areas, – surface tension of the dampening solutionaccepting areas, © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
b
– surface roughness, especially of the ink-free/ non-image surface, – capillary attraction, microstructure of the nonimage surface, – type of materials, – production methods in making the offset plate (mechanical or electrolytic graining, etc.); • Influence of the inking rollers – characteristics of the roller coverings, – surface tension of the roller material, – surface roughness, – viscoelastic properties of the rubber coverings, – throw-on (pressure in the nip), adjustment, – concentric running; • Influence of the blanket – surface tension of the blanket, – surface roughness, – compressibility, – ink acceptance and ink transfer behavior, – tone value transfer behavior, – setting/swelling, release behavior, hardness, dimensional stability; • Influence of the ink – surface tension, contact surface tension in relation to the dampening solution, – rheological properties (viscosity, tack, etc.), – temperature behavior,
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– dampening solution absorption/emulsification behavior (leeway between smearing limit and water vanes), – running clean behavior during start-up, – ink composition, – drying behavior; • Influence of the dampening solution – water hardness/impurities, – dampening solution additives (alcohol, detergents, buffer agents), – pH value, surface tension, – rheological properties (viscosity, tack), – dependence on temperature of the rheological characteristics; • Influence of the substrate – printability properties (smoothness, absorption capacity, wettability), – pH value of the substrate, – workability properties (tension/stretch behavior, picking, tearing); • Influence of the printing press (on print quality and process stability) – design of the printing unit (accurate, stable, vibration absorbent, etc.), – design of the inking unit (front-heavy, backheavy, free surface, little retroaction), – design of the dampening unit (contact dampening, non-contact dampening), – design of the ink feed system (ink metering), – temperature control. This short overview shows that the offset printing technology must be viewed as a multiparameter system. Changing just one of the parameters can have an immediate effect on the printing process. Offset printing is a technology that is clearly determined by interfacial processes, of both a physical and a chemical nature. The fact that homogeneous phases (e.g., pure water) are hardly ever involved in this process, and that more often than not it is a matter of mixed phases (e.g., water in which other substances have been dissolved) or even compound phases (e.g., printing ink, a dispersion of solid and fluid content) makes the understanding of how the various “partners” involved in this process interact more difficult. To understand the actual mechanism of ink transfer in offset printing it must be taken into account that the contacting liquid films are always split in addition to the wetting process. Therefore, if a film of ink and a film of water come into contact with each other, the deci-
sive factor in the transfer of ink is not whether there is some sort of repulsion, but in which liquid cross-section splitting occurs. Splitting depends to a great extent on the cohesion of the liquid film. Offset inks have higher cohesion properties compared to water, which in turn means that splitting always takes place in the water film and not in the ink film. Since it is always the water film that splits, any contact between printing ink and water has the effect that water remains on the ink film (and may consequently also penetrate the ink in an emulsified form). The spread coefficient determines whether the water spreads over the ink surface or not. So that water is not repelled by the ink, the contact surface tension between ink and water must not be too high. Studies have shown that the contact surface tension primarily affects the water adsorbed on the ink surface, whereas the proportion of emulsified water depends on the cohesion of the ink. As there is water on the ink film surface of the printing plate, the ink must also be able to displace the water from the image areas during inking (the water film reaches the image area first via the dampening unit). This does not cause problems, provided that the image area has already been inked. Both the printing plate with its special properties and the ink and dampening solutions play a fundamental role. In conventional offset printing the interaction of surface tension between printing plate and ink is achieved by the addition of dampening solution. The same basic principle is applied in waterless offset printing, but with different surface/materials combinations. Consequently the surface of the waterless printing plate is made up of a highly ink-repellent silicone coating. Silicone oil is mixed into the printing ink, so that a separation layer forms when the ink comes into contact with the plate. Ink is only accepted on areas of the printing plate in which the silicone coating has been removed. Waterless offset printing requires ink of comparatively high viscosity. Due to the milling operation in the inking unit, the inking form rollers get too hot (up to 50 °C); and the cooling effect offered by the dampening solution is also not present, which causes scumming effects. The temperature of the inking unit must therefore be stabilized. This may be done either by means of distributor rollers with water flowing through them or by an air current (very often in conjunction with plate cylinder cooling). The temperature of the inking form roller should not exceed 28–30 °C. Waterless offset printing is particularly suitable for fine © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2.1 Offset Printing
and very fine screens (low dot gain). The absence of dampening solution in this process simplifies the printing unit set-up, meaning that the desired production run quality is achieved more quickly. The absence of the cleaning effect provided by the dampening solution is a disadvantage and hickeys and paper dust deposit easily on the blanket and printing plate. The potential of waterless offset printing is dealt with in greater detail in section 2.1.7. 2.1.1.2 Printing Plates, Printing Ink, Dampening Solution Printing Plates The plates used in offset printing are thin (up to about 0.3 mm), and easy to mount on the plate cylinder, and they mostly have a monometal (aluminum) or, less often, multimetal, plastic or paper construction. Aluminum has been gaining ground for a long time among the metal-based plates over zinc and steel. The necessary graining of the aluminum surface is done mechanically either by sand-blasting, ball graining, or by wet or dry brushing. Nowadays, practically all printing plates are grained in an electrolytic process (anodizing), that is, electrochemical graining with subsequent oxidation (fig. 2.1-3). The imaging, ink-accepting coating (light-sensitive coating, thickness around 1µm) is applied to the base
a Scale:
100 1m
Fig. 2.1-3 Aluminum printing plate with halftone dots. a Magnified a hundred times; b Magnified 2000 times © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
material. This material is usually a polymer, or copper in the case of multimetal plates (bimetal plates). Lightsensitive, diazo (photopolymer) pre-coated aluminum printing plates are now the predominant plates in printshops. The image transfer is produced via the different properties on the surface of such plates after they have been exposed and developed. The remains of the original light-sensitive coating or the light-sensitive coating changed by the effect of light are the ink-accepting (oleophilic) elements that create the image. The thin coating of aluminum oxide created by the special treatment of the aluminum base material a particularly stable water-attracting (hydrophilic) surface with special retention properties. In processing a precoated offset printing plate the essential task lies in achieving surface differentiation using two basic steps, exposure and developing. Chemical changes occur as a result of the penetration of photo-effective (actinic) light (light containing UV rays), causing the light-sensitive coating to react differently depending on its type and structure. There are two types of photochemical reactions when developing the printing plate: • hardening of the light-sensitive layer by light (negative platemaking), • decomposition of the light-sensitive layer by light (positive platemaking).
b Scale:
10 1m
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If the light-sensitive coating is hardened photochemically, it becomes insoluble for the developer in the exposed areas. If, on the other hand, the light-sensitive coating is decomposed photochemically, the developer removes the exposed light-sensitive coating from the base (e.g., aluminum). These two different platemaking processes (positive and negative platemaking) require different exposures to create images,that is, different types of films that are produced in advance (fig. 2.1-4). With positive platemaking and conventional printing plate production, a positive film is used as the original, that is, the non-translucent, blackened sections of the film correspond to the ink-accepting surface elements on the plate. As illustrated in figure 2.1-4a, if light falls on the ink-free areas during exposure, the light-sensitive layer “decomposes,” which results in the non-image areas being uncovered (in this case aluminum) during the developing process. This process has the disadvantage that film edges and dust, that is, the darker areas on the film compared to the translucent image areas on the film copy, are sometimes reproduced on the printing plate as ink-accepting surface elements. In the case of negative platemaking with “negative plates” a negative film is used as an original, that is, the ink-accepting image areas of the printing plate correspond to the translucent, light areas on the film. As shown in figure 2.1-4b, the light-sensitive coating is hardened on the printing plate by light, so that it stays
Film layer Light sensitive layer
Original/positive film (light-proof areas are inked in the print)
Aluminum base
3. Development (exposed areas are dissolved)
Exposure
Carrier base Film layer Printing plate
Ink-accepting
2. Etching of the light-sensitive area
1. Exposure under vacuum
a
b
Thermal Plates Alongside conventional printing plate systems, thermal plates have been developed for digital imaging.
Exposure
Carrier base
Printing plate
in place after the developing process, as opposed to the unexposed areas, which are removed. The developed plates are then gummed up to protect the plate surface and preserve the plate. The finished printing plate will, of course, be identical in informational content regardless of whether positive or negative platemaking is used. Only the kinds of film used for production are different. Different characteristic curves between the tone value of the film and that of the plate must be taken into account in prepress. Whether to use positive or negative working plates is a fundamental decision to be made by the printshop. Many printing plates can be heat-treated (baked) after developing to increase their service life. For smaller formats, single-color or multicolor jobs on medium-quality, polyester-based plates are for reasons of cost preferred over aluminum plates as their dimensional stability is lower. For quality assurance and monitoring during platemaking, control elements are copied onto the plates. Standardized elements are available, for instance, in accordance with FOGRA’s standardization concept [2.1.-1] with a wedge, such as the PMS or the UGRA offset test wedge (see sec. 3.1.7.2 and 4.3.7).
Light sensitive layer Aluminum base 1. Exposure under vacuum
Ink-accepting
Original/negative film (transparent areas are inked in the print) 2. Hardening the light-sensitive layer
3. Development (unexposed areas are dissolved)
Fig. 2.1-4 Platemaking. a Positive platemaking; b Negative platemaking © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2.1 Offset Printing
(These plates are described in sec. 4.3.9 in connection with computer to plate technologies.) A polyesterbased waterless offset plate is shown in figure 2.1-5 as an example of a plate that is imaged by thermal ablation using laser light. Platemaking processes are described in detail in section 4.3.9. Printing Ink The ink used in offset printing is usually a highly viscous mixture having the basic components of ink pig-
a
Laser beam (imaging) Ink-accepting surface Ink-repellent surface
120 g/m2), • extreme electrostatic charging (static electricity) of printing paper.
• a more complicated structure, • less folding variability. Additional Functions in Folding Units Tool carrier shafts are installed immediately in front of and/or behind the folding units; they permit additional functions such as
Buckle plate
Bookbinding sheet
Pair of folding rollers Slitter shafts in frontal buckle plates
Folding module Slitter shafts after buckle plates Fig. 7.2-25 Buckle folding unit with four folding modules and slitter shafts © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• • • •
cutting, perforating, creasing, and joining (e.g., gluing, welding),
all in the direction of sheet travel. The location of the tool shafts (commonly known as “knife shafts”) is shown in the example of a simple buckle folding unit in figure 7.2-27. Circular knives are mounted onto the knife shafts. The circular knives are of varying shapes so that not only cutting but also perforating, punch perforating, or creasing is possible (more than one hundred different shapes and sizes are available). They are selected ac-
799
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Fig. 7.2-26 Schematic representation of a knife folding unit Folding knife
Folding knife drive
Bookbinding sheet
Sheet transport belt
Lateral sheet guide
Sheet transport belt
Folding rollers
Transport and tool/knife shafts installed downstream Sheet guiding devices
Sheet transport belt
Knife for perforating the fold at the head of the folded sheet
Knife shaft pair installed downstream
Separating slot
Knife for perforating the back fold on the folded sheet
Knife shafts installed upstream
Fig. 7.2-27 Knife shafts in a buckle plate folding unit
cording to the specific processing function. Four examples of perforation tools are shown in figure 7.2-28. To install the tools, the knife shaft must either be removed from the folding unit, or the tool be bent so far apart at the separating slot that it can be pushed across the shaft. Folding Machines Folding machines consist of technological modules (folding units, feeder, delivery, etc.) that can be arranged by the manufacturer to perform a specific
Knife for a punch perforation in the back fold for perforation binding
Knife for perforating a tear-off fold on the sheet surface
Fig. 7.2-28 Example of perforating tools for knife shafts
task or put together according to customer requirements. The basic modules are listed in table 7.2-6. Moreover, further modules such as gluing units, thread-sealing units, gatefold units, or sheet presses can © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Feeder: Piles or sheet streams are fed into the press by operators. In the feeder, the folded sheets are separated, aligned, and transported into the first folding unit. Folding units: In the folding units, the process tasks are realized. They can be distinguished as: • Buckle folding units – in which only the buckle folding method is applied. Each buckle folding unit has a separate drive. • Knife folding units – usually additional modules in each of which one knife fold is carried out. • Combined folding units – are compact systems in which one buckle folding unit and at least two knife folding units are interlinked (arranged crosswise) with one another.
Conveyance units: The conveyance units transport the sheet to be folded from the feeder into the first folding unit and between the folding units. At the same time they align the sheet to an edge parallel to the direction of travel by diagonally arranged transport rollers or tapes. Deliveries: Deliveries on folders are technological modules that are equipped with a separate drive, can be coupled to different exits of the folding machine, and deliver the folded sheet in a way that the operator can easily remove it. Table 7.2-6 Basic modules of folding machines
be integrated. An electronic control module takes over the networking of the technological modules, some of which have a separate drive. Quality control, job management, or machine statistics are also carried out by this control module. Primarily used folding units are • buckle folding machines (fig. 7.2-29) and • combined folding machines (fig. 7.2-30). Buckle Folding Machines. In buckle folding machines, up to four independent buckle folding units can be interlinked. The relative position of the folding units to one another can be altered according to the job. To produce right-angle folds (the successive fold is carried out at an angle of 90° to the previous fold), the folding units are arranged at an angle of 90° to one another. The fold-
Fig. 7.2-29 Buckle folding machine with noise insulation hoods, max. format 78 cm ¥ 116 cm and rotary pile feeder; folding unit layout shown in fig. 7.2-37 (Topline TD 78, Heidelberg)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
ing units are normally fitted with 2 to 8 buckle folding modules, whereby the first folding unit has the most buckle folding modules and the last folding unit has normally only two buckle modules. Within a type of folding unit there are module variations whose size scale is determined by the sheet infeed width, such as 36 cm, 52 cm, 56 cm, 66 cm, 78 cm, 94 cm, 112 cm, 142 cm. The size scale follows frequent printing sheet sizes and bookbinding sheet sizes. In contrast to printing presses where the sheet is usually fed sideways, that is, with the longer sheet edge in front, with a folding machine it is usually fed lengthways to the first folding unit, that is, with the shorter sheet edge in front. In a four-unit buckle folding machine up to eighteen folding modules can be used. There is no single folding task for which all the folding modules are required.
Buckle folding unit
Rotary pile feeder
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Fig. 7.2-30 Combined folding machine with buckle folding and knife folding systems and vertical pile feeder (Proline KI 55, Heidelberg)
Knife folding units
Delivery
In general, the number of folds comes to one to six per bookbinding sheet. Because it is possible to rearrange folding units and also activate or deactivate individual folding modules, the number of possible fold variations is very large, on account of which various special folds can be planned and carried out alongside standard folding patterns. In this diversity lies the principal advantage of buckle folding machines. Figure 7.2-29 shows a buckle folding machine equipped with a rotary pile feeder (fig. 7.2-31), three buckle plate units and a delivery. Two of the buckle plate units have four folding modules and the third has two. The machine produces right-angle folds. If eight concertina folds are required for a job, the second folding unit can be swiveled by 90° and positioned in a straight line behind the first one. The delivery is then located behind the second folding unit. Combined Folding Machines. These folders are made up of a combination of buckle folding units and knife folding units. The folding machine shown in figure 7.2-30 is a buckle folding unit with four to eight folding modules and two to three knife folding units coupled rigidly to one another. The buckle fold unit is installed in front of the knife folding units. The first knife folding unit is positioned at an angle of 90° to the buckle fold; the second one, underneath the first one, is arranged for a right-angle fold. In front of the folding unit stands the feeder and behind it the delivery, which can be moved to two or three exits in accordance with the folding pattern. If necessary, this configuration can supplemented by a further buckle folding unit arranged at a right angle. For ordinary folding tasks in print finishing companies, this variability is sufficient. Moreover, combined folding machines are distinguished by a range of further features:
Buckle folding unit
Feeder
• They require less working space and are cheaper than comparable buckle folding machines. • Paper with extreme characteristics (e.g., lightweight paper or bulky paper) can be folded more easily than with buckle folding machines. • The machines can be converted for a different job in a few minutes. This machine type is also offered for various processing widths (e.g., 56 cm, 66 cm, 78 cm, and 94 cm). Fig. 7.2-30 shows a combined folding machine with an infeed width of 55 cm. The machine consists of a vertical pile feeder, a combined folding unit, and a stream delivery. The maximum sheet size to be processed is 55 cm ¥ 90 cm. The folding machine is principally designed for the production of cross folds. Feeder. The reliability factor of folding machines for bookbinding sheets is determined by the degree of development of the feeder’s mechanical design since most production interruptions occur when the sheet is separated from the sheet pile and when it is transported to the folding unit. Five different feeder principles are used in sheet folding machines. Rotary pile feeders (fig. 7.2-31) are the most frequently used feeders for high to medium runs. They are predominantly used for sheet sizes greater than 70 cm ¥ 100 cm. The sheet piles are taken manually from the pallet, laid onto the feeder table, and spread into a sheet stream. The sheet stream is conveyed on transport belts and the reversing drum to the separating table. The sheet stream is arranged such that the sheet to be separated can be taken from above. The suction roller separates the upper sheet and transports it out of the feeder; usually it is supported in this process by blower nozzles. The rotary pile feeder is a nonstop feeder offering high relia© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
bility since (manual) pre-separation takes place due to the shingling of the pile. The disadvantage is the high physical burden on the operator in placing the sheet pile onto the feeder table and shingling the pile. Vertical pile feeders are frequently used for small to medium job runs and are predominantly used for sheet sizes smaller than 70 cm ¥ 100 cm. The principles of the vertical pile feeder correspond to those of sheet offset presses (see 2.1.2.2); an example is shown in figure 7.2-30. The pallet feeder is a type of feeder seldom used in finishing. It is predominantly installed for direct finishing of printed sheets in large sheet-size folding machines (similar to fig. 2.1-161). The stream feeder (fig. 7.2-32) is suitable for folding machines processing small formats and small runs (approx. less than 10000 sheets per job). Stream feeders are nonstop feeders. Separation is achieved with a front upper suction roller, that is, the top sheet is transported. Therefore, when reloading the feeder, the sheets must be pushed underneath the end of the sheet stream in the feeder. This simple and reliable separation method is especially intended for small-format folders (infeed width less than 40 cm). The sheet stream in the feeder is fanned out by air nozzles located in the side frames. Box/suction feeders (fig. 7.2-33) are predominantly used in office folding machines for the smallest sheetsize range and folding the shortest runs. Box feeders have a lower, front suction roller separation. They are nonstop feeders. However, because of the pile weight, the maximum pile height is limited to approximately 8 cm. Box/suction feeders are not suitable for industrial folding.
Fig. 7.2-31 Rotary pile feeder in folding machines with sheet reversal (see also fig. 7.2-29)
Deliveries. Deliveries on folding machines show an even greater diversity than that of feeders. In the area of delivery extra tasks can be carried out by installing additional units: • Backfold pressing attachments improve the storing properties and workability of folded sheets. • Stacking units are used to improve stacking coordination and to check the quantities. • Strapping final folding products for dispatch in accurate quantities. Deliveries can principally be categorized by type such as stream deliveries, upright sheet deliveries, vertical pile deliveries, and bundle deliveries. With stream deliveries (fig. 7.2-34) the folded sheets arrive shingled in the delivery and can be removed by the operator in portions, jogged into packages, and set down on a pallet. In finishing this form of delivery is very popular if somewhat labor intensive. It is cost-effective and easy to handle. This type of delivery is offered in various modified versions. Stream deliveries have proven themselves to be especially effective for finishing short print runs and variable production structures. In the case of an upright sheet delivery (fig. 7.2-35) the sheets are placed on their backs and form horizontal piles. Portioning into packages by shifting the pile is possible. Upright sheet deliveries simplify manual removal of the sheet packages and therefore lead to a better performance. Therefore, these deliveries are favored for use in high performance folding machines producing long run jobs.
Sheet stream Feeder table
Reversing drum with transport tapes
Suction drum Separated sheet
Separating table
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Tape transport system and for conveying the sheet stream
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Fig. 7.2-32 Principle of the stream feeder Suction roller Sheet stream
Separated bookbinding sheet (during transport)
Sheet pile
Loading
Transport belt
Folded sheets arriving from the folder Folded sheet pile
Suction roller
Fig. 7.2-33 Principle of the box/suction feeder
Sheet stream
Folding machine
Fig. 7.2-35 Upright sheet delivery on a folding machine
Fig. 7.2-34 Stream delivery on a folding machine
Folding Production Lines Highly equipped products with low numbers of pages are being increasingly processed in folding production lines. The basic units of these lines are various folding units. These are interlinked with modules that can
In the vertical pile delivery an upright positioned pile with folded sheets is formed in the delivery. This delivery can be coupled with a strapping unit. In bundle deliveries piles of some 50 cm in height are formed, these are then pressed between end boards and, while in a compressed state, bound with a polypropylene tape. The bundles must then be set down on pallets. Deliveries have a separate drive and their height can be adjusted since they are positioned at various exits of the folding machine.
• carry out complicated adhesive binding using various glues for different tasks (e.g., accurate partial strip gluing), • carry out wire-stitching tasks, • gather sheet sections and finish them together, • glue cards, mailings, samples, and so on, onto a base sheet, • cut, cut out, cut into, perforate, punch, and so on, according to complicated patterns, • stick labels, seals, and so on, onto sheet surfaces, • personalize products using ink jet or electrophotographic imprinting units, • bundle units ready to be posted. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
These units are supplemented by a range of logistic modules. Folding workflows are only at the beginning of their development. In businesses producing advertising material they are already a dominating economic factor. Folding Unit Scheme The variety of folding units and special equipment forced folding machine manufacturers into setting up symbol systems for technical characterization of their modules. Symbols are used to describe technical configurations. This form of representation helps the press operator since he also works with graphical symbols when setting the press. The symbols listed in table 7.2-7 are necessary for describing the layout of folding machines. The technical structure of a folding unit is drawn up from these symbols and from this the whole folding machine. This results in the folding unit layout. (Not to be confused with the fold layout. A fold layout describes the type and sequence of folds necessary to carry out a certain finishing task.)
Table 7.2-7 Symbols used to describe the configuration of folding machines
Symbol
Figure 7.2-36 shows the configuration of a combined folding machine. The buckle fold unit has knife shafts installed upstream and downstream as well as two upward-facing and two downward-facing buckle plates (see also fig. 7.2-25). In no circumstances can the fourknife folding units all be used simultaneously: After the first fold, the sheet is either transported to the left or to the right. The largest number of folds that can be carried out in this version is seven (four parallel folds in the buckle fold unit and three cross folds in the knife folding unit). Usually, a separate single-folding unit is installed in place of the two knife folding units for the third knife fold, which is adjusted according to the requirements of the fold layout. The delivery is also to be adapted to the fold layout and the desired direction of sheet exit. The buckle folding machine in figure 7.2-37 represents a typical configuration in industrial bookbinderies. It consists of three buckle folding units, where the first two are each equipped with four buckle plates and two knife shafts and the third is equipped with two buckle plates and one knife shaft mounted
Description The arrow represents the infeed direction of the sheet into the first folding unit. The corner represents the lay edges in the feeder of the folding machine (folding lay). The thick line stands for a buckle fold module with upper buckle plate, i.e., the upper face of the sheet in the infeed goes to the inside of the folded signature. The thick broken line stands for a buckle fold module with lower buckle plate, i.e., the bottom side of the sheet in the infeed goes to the inside of the folded signature. The dotted line symbolizes a pair of tool-carrying shafts (knife shaft) for carrying rotating creasing, perforating, and cutting tools in front of or behind the folding units.
Knife folding module. Knife folding module with pair of knife shafts installed downstream. Buckle folding module that is integrated into the knife folding unit and produces a parallel fold to the knife fold. Separate, folding module in a variable position (knife fold) for one fold. The folding unit can fold upwards and downwards.
Transport table, which conveys the sheets betweenthe folding units. During transport, the sheet is also aligned to a lay edge (thickly marked).
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Delivery
Delivery
Knife folding unit (4 knife folding modules) Buckle folding unit (4 buckle plate modules)
downstream. To produce right-angle folds, the folding units must be arranged at an angle of 90° to one another. The folding units’ infeed width is graduated since smaller fold widths come about with cross folding. The machine is set up for ten folds, which, however, cannot all be used in one process due to technical limitations of the material. The variability of buckle folding machines is achieved by using different types of buckles and by rearranging the folding units to one another. Figure 7.2-29 shows a buckle folding machine that is set up according to the folding unit layout (fig. 7.2-37). 7.2.2.3 Folding Bookbinding Sheets In the folding process, bookbinding sheets are transformed such that
Tool-carrying shaft (knife shaft)
Feeder
Fig. 7.2-36 Configuration of a combined folding machine
Delivery Folding unit T3 Transport table 1
Transport table 2 Folding unit T2 Folding unit T1 Feeder Fig. 7.2-37 Configuration of a buckle folding machine (according to fig. 7.2-29)
• a gross format is produced that is capable of being processed further, • the pages lie on top of one another in the “correct” order, • finishing is ensured, • the aesthetic demands (quality) of the user on the end product are satisfied. The conditions for finishing are laid down during the printing plate production (position of the pages on the printed sheet, slitting allowance, routing allowance for perfect binding, etc.). Therefore, a page layout on the printed sheets must be arranged between printer (or printing plate producer) and bookbinder that corresponds to the premises listed above. The production planning of books and brochures should therefore logically start with the finished product, namely the book bindery/finishing. When deciding upon the type of folded signature and the page layout on the bookbinding sheet, two procedures are commonly applied: • On the basis of quality requirements and binding specifications, a (best possible) fold is recommended, and the printing format is determined from this, taking account of the available printing technology. • The type of fold is selected based on the kind of press used and the maximum exploitation of the print format. The further processing of the folded sheet is of secondary importance. Between printers and bookbinders explicit instructions are essential to eliminate any misinterpretations. The features of flat bookbinding sheets (fig. 7.2-38) are: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Back edge
14 (13)
(4) 3
Head trim
Sheet travel direction
Final size
Head gutter
6 (5) Alignment lays
(12) 11 Routing edge
10 (9)
Rear gripper fold
(8) 7
Height of the bookbinding sheet
Center gutter (16) 15
Front trim
2 (1)
Back edge
Foot trim
Collation mark (reverse side)
The bookbinding sheet is shown as it lies in the feeder of the folding machine. The page numbers set in brackets are on the reverse side.
Front trim
Width of the bookbinding sheet Fig. 7.2-38 Bookbinding sheet with physical dimensions and markings as well as the configuration of the folding unit
• Columns in the type area (text). • Margins; taking note of trimmings and routing depth (with perfect binding, etc.). • Sheet numbers with abbreviated title (outer edge), sheet numbers with asterisk (inner edge). The sheet number is referred to as the signature. It depicts the position of the folded sheet in the block. When allocating page numbers for a signature, preceding signatures must consequently be taken into account. (In a 16-page folded sheet of signature 2, pages 17 to 32 are arranged in the correct order if signature 1 also consists of 16 pages.) The number of pages of the folded sheet semi-finished product usually requires a folding sequence that varies in terms of the number and position of the folds on the sheet. A classification of the different types of folded signatures is given in figure 7.2-39. Practical limitations to folding variations arise through: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• quality demands on the folded signatures (limitation of the number of folds) and • the variability of the folding machines. Several important types of folded sheets are presented in figure 7.2-40. For the traditional and still the most frequently used fold sequence – symmetrical right-angle folds – a technical colloquial language has come about (table 7.2-8). Alongside the folded sheets, containing one page of each surface (one-up folded sheet), two-up folded sheets are produced and processed, especially in large companies in the graphics arts industry. With two-up jobs, two folded sheets are placed on top of one another and processed jointly. Figure 7.2-41 shows the variations of the two-up operation: • Two-up, genuine: The same folded signatures stand above one another.
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Number of folds 0-folds (sheet/2) 1-fold (sheet/4)
Fold position on the sheet
Fold sequence
Symmetrical fold positions The fold halves the original format
Parallel folds The sequence of the folds is such that they are made parallel to one another.
asymmetrical fold positions – letter folding – concertina (zigzag) folding – gate folding (double gatefold) – undetermined divider of the original format
2-fold 3-fold 4-fold
Right-angle folds The sequence of the folds is such that they are made at an angle of 904 after one another. Combination fold From a parallel and rightangle fold.
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
1 2
3
808
1
2
Fig. 7.2-39 Folded sheet classification [7.2-3]
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Fig. 7.2-40 Types of folded sheets [7.2-3] Asymmetrical parallel fold sequences
Concertina folds
Gate folds (double gatefolds)
Letter folds Combined fold sequences of parallel and right-angle folds
12 pages
Table 7.2-8 Designations for symmetrical right-angle folds
Designation
Eighth sheet Quarter sheet Half sheet Full sheet Double sheeta
12 pages
16 pages
Number of pages 2 4 8 16 32
16 pages
24 pages
Number of folds (symmetrical right-angle folds)
0 1 2 3 4
32 pages
Alternative designation Sheet/2 Sheet/4 Sheet/8 Sheet/16 Sheet/32
Æ sh/2 Æ sh/4 Æ sh/8 Æ sh/16 Æ sh/32
a not to be confused with two-up work!
Fig. 7.2-41 Variations of two-up (two identical parts printed on one sheet) folded sheets
Page sequence Back Top
Sig. 1 Top
Top
Sig. 1
2-up sheet
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2-up block
2-up block separated
Last signature
Top
First signature
Front
Page sequence 2-up sheet 2-up sheet “genuine” “come and go”
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7 Print Finishing Processes
• Two-up, “come and go”: The first sheet is folded and finished with the last sheet, the second sheet with the penultimate sheet, and so on. The “folded sheet from two folded sheets” has, for the most part a narrow format. • When processing small book and brochure formats (mini books) it might be necessary to bind 4, 8 or 12 blocks simultaneously. Furthermore, printers and bookbinders agree on the definition of folded sheet families. For the selected fold characteristics (e.g., symmetrical right-angle fold and/or asymmetrical right-angle fold), base sheets (e.g., 8-page right-angle fold; 6-page letter fold) are defined. There are usually variations to the base sheet that are produced with more (or as it may be, fewer) symmetrical right-angle folds. By maintaining the sheet family when printing end sheets, the same sheet size can be used as for the base sheet (when printing several ups per sheet). In this way the job can be produced on the same press using just one paper size/sheet format. For the page layout on the bookbinding sheet, information on the method of block formation (gathering or inserting), along with the folding layout and the number of ups (see also sec. 7.2.4.1) is required. There are three typical methods used to layout the page: • manual preparation of fold patterns, • using existing catalogs with folding techniques, • computer-aided page division using folding technique files or algorithmic preparation of virtual fold patterns. The easiest method is the manual folding of folding samples: • folding according to a specified pattern, • entering the correct page sequence manually into the sheets, • applying the page pattern to all signatures. To simplify the work of job processors and folding machine operators and to avoid the communication of incorrect information, manufacturers of folding machines have developed catalogs in which frequently used folding layouts are systematically compiled. In this way, the following additional information is also available:
• clear designation of the folding machine system on which the folding layout can be produced, • concept of folding units that can be arranged variably to one another and the nature of their assignment, • instructions on the setting of folding machines, including feeder and delivery, • data on the special features and/or limitations when selecting the intended folding layout. In practice the work with the folding pattern catalogs is done in such a way that • the creator of the graphic product or the job processor first selects a folding layout from the catalog, • the printing plate producer uses the folding pattern in the catalog for the printing plate imposition; the folding pattern and the printing variant are prerequisites for the assembly of printing plates, • the folding machine operator uses the information in the folding pattern catalog to set up the folding machine. In this way the job can be completed perfectly. A systematic description of various folding sequences and the corresponding planning routines (independent of folding machine manufacturers) occurs through the fold type catalog of trade associations. This method is based on the bookbinding sheet travel through the press. The computerized page layout serves to automate the planning and production processes in the printing industry. Computer programs for • calculating and processing jobs (commercial software), and • controlling machines and systems, require modules that are able to execute the automatic page layout and the imposition of printing plates in the next production stage. Similarly to manual procedures, these programs are based on two principles (fig. 7.2-42). Quality of Folded Sheets. Significant features of the quality of folded sheets are: • folding accuracy, that is, deviations in image area locations, © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Computerized page layout/imposition
The basis of the program modules is a fold type catalog which has been manually drawn up. The catalog is stored in a master data file. The page layout for a job is calculated on the basis of this master data. New folding patterns must be integrated in the system as master data files. The name for this folding pattern can be chosen freely. With this method, programmers can develop the software with limited know-how in folding.
The program module creates virtual fold patterns and allocates the pages with page numbers. A master file for individual folding patterns does not exist. The software requires a designation for the folded sheet which clearly characterizes the folding layout. Pagination occurs by means of algorithms using the “imposition rules”. Extreme folding layouts can be paginated without interventions in the program. The software development of such a program module requires detailed knowledge of the technological folding conditions.
Fig. 7.2-42 Computerized page layout principles
• deformation of folded sheets in the area of the fold edges (wrinkling), • sharply defined folds. The folding accuracy is the most significant quality feature since deviations from the specified fold edge cause visible image-area location errors in the end product. The deviation of the fold line from a specified position can be set right by means of controls. The settings require experience since the origin of the deviation is sometimes difficult to identify. Incidental errors are deviations that occur during production after the machine has been set up in accordance with the desired values. They can be influenced by • • • • • •
the type of fold and number of folds in the sheet, fluctuation in the quality of the printing paper, the design of the folding machine, momentary technical problems, the operating speed of the folding machine, environmental changes in the operating room.
The operator has little influence (apart from changing the operating speed) over incidental errors. A further cause of image-area location faults in the folded sheet is the shifting of inner sheet sections into the fold curvature (fig. 7.2-43). In thick single-layer brochures (e.g., magazines), the shifting of the inner folded sheet sections is evened out in the printing plate production by increasing the gutter dimensions of the outer folded sheet sections. Creases occur on the bending edges and corners due to material displacement and stretching. The thicker the paper and the higher the number of right-angle © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Fig. 7.2-43 Twisting and shifting sheet sections caused by fold curvature [7.2-4]
folds per sheet, the greater the tendency to wrinkling. Creasing is counteracted by the slot perforation of the fold edges (fig. 7.2-28). If the sheets are bound to blocks using the stitching method, the back edge (fold on which the binding occurs) must not be perforated. Sharply defined folds in the back edge can primarily be improved • through an additional pressing station in front of the delivery of the folding machine (very high pressing force) and • by pressing the folded sheet when it is temporarily stored (e.g., folded signature bundles).
7.2.3
Forwarding
7.2.3.1 Characterization of the Process Forwarding: Folded signatures, sheets, or inserts are jointed by bonding means (e.g., glued) or loosely inserted in the folded sheet. Also: equipping procedures on folded signatures prior
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7 Print Finishing Processes
to collation into multi-layer blocks or insertion into single-layer blocks. The forwarding process is generally followed by gathering into blocks partial products such as: • folded sheets, base folded sheet of the process section, • folded sheets of the same paper quality and size as the base folded sheet, • folded sheets in another quality and/or size than the base folded sheet, • leaves in another quality and size than the base folded sheet, • mailings, cards, • product samples. With bonding forwarding processes, dispersion glues (e. g., polyvinyl acetate dispersions) are primarily used. For gluing on mailings and samples, hot-melt adhesives and contact adhesives are also common. The forwarding variants are listed in table 7.2-9. A list of products created with forwarding operations is given in table 7.2-10. 7.2.3.2 Forwarding Process in Industrial Finishing The forwarding process is avoided as much as possible in industrial bookbinding companies, since individual signatures of a job need to be separated and further processed after the folding operation. This requires logistics and special coordination in job planning. An appropriate product design is beneficial. Printed products are designed such that forwarding operations are no longer required. This is achieved by • avoiding end-folded signatures of two or four pages, by means of composition measures, and • planning in of picture sheets into the block instead of gluing pictures on and in folded sheets. Despite this, the process needs to be carried out for special jobs. One possibility to minimize the forwarding process is the integration into earlier (folding) or later (e.g., gathering) processes. This is often the case • when pasting cards to magazine sheets and • when gluing on end papers for book blocks. Forwarding in a separate operation is done with tipping machines (fig. 7.2-44). The machine is capable of:
• tipping single sheets or folded sheets to base sheets, • inserting or gluing single sheets or folded sheets into the middle of base sheets, • attaching single sheets or folded sheets onto base sheets (with two or more adhesive strips), • hanging or attaching pictures of smaller size than the base sheet onto or into the middle of base sheets. Gluing Endpapers Endpapers are vital construction elements for hard covers since the pasting of the book block to the book cover takes place through the endpapers on the first and last signature. Endpapers are folded sheets (in industrial bookbinderies usually quarter sheet) made from particularly bend-resistant papers that are glued with an adhesive strip to the back edge in front of the first text sheet and behind the last text sheet. When connecting block and cover, in each case the outer endpaper is glued across the whole surface onto the case of the book cover (fig. 7.2-45; see also table 7.2-9). The connection between book block and cover can break easily when no endpapers are used and when the first and last sheet of the book block are glued to the cover. In craftsman’s bookbinding special endpaper constructions are used in order to make the opening hinge point particularly robust (e.g., for leather or parchment covers). The integration of endpaper gluing into the subprocess of block production has been achieved in three variations: • as a module in perfect binding lines (fig. 7.2-46), • as a module in finishing lines for thread-stitched (or sewn) books, • as a “replacement cover” in perfect binders (fig. 7.2-47). Endpaper gluing stations are positioned between the gathering machine and the perfect binder in perfect binding lines (fig. 7.2-46). In a usual arrangement, subsequent to the separating operation, the endpapers are routed on rails, which carry endpapers 3 to 5 mm higher than the spine height of the blocks. While they are conveyed, they are glued by the strip gluing unit and pasted to an aligned outer sheet of the block. The back edge of the block is removed in the perfect binder, though the endpaper folds stay in place. The spine gluing is carried out and back © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Table 7.2-9 Forwarding variants (continued on next page)
Base folded sheet
Laying down a (usually four-page) folded sheet around a base folding sheet. Lay down sheet (four-page) Base folded sheet
Inserting a (usually four-page) folded sheet into a base folding sheet. Pasted sheet Adhesive
“Adhesive sheet”
Sticking and pasting a leaf or a (usually four-page) folded sheet onto a base folded signature (end papers, plates, etc.) Base folded sheet Adhesive sheet
Sticking a sheet or (usually four-page) folded sheet around a “core sheet” as protective sheet or as end paper (out-of-date form). Base folded sheet
Adhesive
Base folded sheet
Adhesive
Fixed inserted sheet
Folded sheets
Carrier material (backing strip)
Adhesive
Tipping in a loose leaf or (usually four-page) folded sheet into a “core sheet” as an advertising insert or similar.
Flat gluing sheets (endpapers) onto a substrate (backing strip). This sheet construction is used as a ”pseudo cover” in adhesive binders. In this way book blocks can also be produced on a binder for multi-layer brochures.
Backing strips
Glue
Endpaper
stripping is applied to the block spine. The backing strip ensures an additional stabilization of the endpaper hinge point. A rational variant is endpaper gluing with the help of brochure cover feeders in adhesive binding ma© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Backing is the connection of two folded sheets (e.g., first signature and endpaper) by means of backing strips (paper or fabric strips) on the back edge of the sheets. In this way the product is strengthened at the bending points.
chines. Here, the endpapers are glued flat to the backing strips. This product is fed through the cover feeder to the glued block spine (fig. 7.2-47). Tipping in cards in magazines (back-stitched brochures) is carried out in gatherer-stitchers. To do so
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Table 7.2-9 (continued) Forwarding variants
Adhesive
Folded sheet
Attaching supplements, usually pictures on or in a folded sheet by means of one strip gluing. The picture is smaller than the folded sheet. Even mailings or samples are attached. In card gluers, sheets are also attached with glue spots.
Sheet (supplement)
Adhesive
Folded sheet
Sheet
Table 7.2-10 Products in forwarding
Fastening sheets, usually pictures on or in a folded sheet by means of two adhesive strips opposite each other. The picture is smaller than the folded sheet.
Intermediate products
End products
Forwarded sheets For the production of book blocks, multi-layer brochures, and back-stitched brochures
Folded brochures with cards, mailings or samples for industry, trade and culture
Folded sheets with front and back endpaper For the production of book blocks for fixed bindings
Fig. 7.2-44 Combined sheet gluing and tipping machine (Tipping machine VEA 520, Hunkeler)
Feeder for endpapers
Feeder for base sheet Delivery
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
card gluers are installed in the inserters in place of folded sheet feeders (Müller Martini) or positioned between the feeders (Ferag, cf. sec. 7.3.2.4). Problems of Quality with Endpaper Gluing In conjunction with endpaper gluing, three areas are evident where quality is lacking: • The adhesive strip that connects the text sheet and endpaper is too wide and/or uneven. The error comes about either through the adhesive layer being too thick or the processed papers lacking absorption capability (e.g., art printing) so that the glue is squeezed out when pressing the joint. • The gluing bursts during the subsequent processing step of the blocks or when the end product is used.
Glued to the board paper Glued to the first text sheet
Endpaper Book case (hardcover) Adhesive film
Cover fold
Block
Endpaper Book block
Spine
The cause of this shortcoming is the use of an unsuitable endpaper adhesive. Particularly when processing text sheets that are printed extensively right up into the back edge, there is no sufficient wetting with glue. The problem can be reduced by using glues that spread better. It is preferable, however, not to print on the surfaces to be pasted. • The endpaper is placed too far into the inside of the sheet. This causes tension on the end product, which, when the book is used, can lead to the book falling apart prematurely. The problem is pointed out in figure 7.2-48. If the endpaper is set off too far from the back edge of the text sheet, as shown in the middle drawing, the position of the endpaper opening hinge and the cover fold no longer line up. When opening the cover (bottom drawing), the
Fig. 7.2-45 Endpapers in mass-produced hardcovers
Endpaper feeder (at the front)
Block spine gluing Flat gluing
Adhesive film
Block spine Endpaper Backing strips
Fig. 7.2-47 Flat glued endpaper
Endpaper feeder (at the back)
Gathering machine
Strip gluing unit
Fig. 7.2-46 Endpaper gluing machine in binding lines © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Perfect binder
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Endpaper
Cover fold
Correctly glued endpaper (Endpaper hinge is under the cover fold) Incorrectly glued endpaper The endpaper is stuck to the sheet in front of the cover fold
Weak point when burdened
Open book with incorrectly pasted endpaper Fig. 7.2-48 Tension due to incorrect endpaper gluing
first few pages of the block are pulled around the pivoting point – the fold between the cover and the spine inlay –, which creates excessive tensions in the binding. This overly high burden destroys, in particular, the adhesive bindings, which would otherwise be sufficiently robust.
7.2.4
Assembling into Blocks
7.2.4.1 Characterization of the Process Assembling is the production of a specific sequence of folded sheets, leafs, or webs into a loosely jointed block. The sorting of product items also occurs • when assembling printing forms, • when assigning interrelated printing units that produce newspapers from several webs, and • in digital printing systems. Materials and partial products to be processed are • non-folded and folded substrate webs, • printed sheets or bookbinding sheets,
• unprepared and prepared folded signatures, • sheets. In conventional finishing, it is usual to process folded sheets or leafs (individual sheets) in the untrimmed format of the end product. Principally, it is also possible to assemble non-folded printed sheets or bookbinding sheets and to fold after that in the sequence of the signatures. Two basic principles are to be applied for the assembling of sheets and leafs into blocks (table 7.2-11). Table 7.2-12 lists the types of products created by assembling Prior to assembling, all signatures of an end product produced independently of one another must be available at the same time. Each signature is temporarily stored on its own “storage unit.” This leads to the following elementary processes: • Separation from the same quantity of signatures from feeders to a stacker (table 7.2-13), • Production of a block in the assembler (several bins/trays), (table 7.2-13), • Conveyance of separated signatures, feeder supplies and assembler collects (see also fig. 7.2-49). “Gathering/inserting into blocks”is an assembly process with the transition into a different processing dimension (n folded sheets into one book block). This results in organizational, planning, and intermediate storage problems with a varying number of signatures in consecutive jobs. 7.2.4.2 Gathering Gathering Machines in Bookbinding Shops When gathering books and multi-layer brochures the following elementary processes must be carried out: • transporting the folded sheets (stored on pallets, for example), which are sorted according to signatures to the corresponding sheet feeder for the signature, • loading the folded sheets into the correct feeder, • separating the folded sheets, • transferring the separated folded sheets to the assembler, collecting into a block, • transporting the blocks into the delivery, • unloading the blocks onto a pallet or transferring them to a finishing module, • checking the correct sheet sequence (collating). © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Table 7.2-11 Basic principles for assembling signatures and leaves (individual sheets)
Assembling/Gathering into blocks Collating/Gathering into multi-layer blocks Inserting/Gathering into single-layer blocks Signature 1 Signature 2
Signature 1 Signature 2
Signature 3
Signature 3 Assembling by collating of signatures Æ Assembling by inserting signatures into unbound multi-layer blocks arise. one another Æ unbound single-layer blocks arise. Collation of sheets Æ unbound sheet blocks arise.
Table 7.2-12 Products created by assembling
Single-layer block
Multi-layer block
Inermediate products
Collated blocks are bound into book blocks for hardcovers and multi-layer brochures.
Loose leaf assemblies Loose sheet assemblies Inlays for files
Sheet collations are used in binding as an adhesive binding product or for various individual sheet binding systems Magazines School books Booklets
Figure 7.2-49 shows the structure of a conventional gathering machine (for collating signatures). The folded sheet pallets are transported from the folded sheet temporary storage into the machine prestorage. A feeder is required for each signature. The folded sheets are stacked in the corresponding feeder magazine. A separating module with front underedge separation puts each sheet into the raceway, so that the sheets can be conveyed by pushers towards the delivery. The speed of the assembler and pushers is synchronized such that the separated sheet from one magazine drops onto that of the previous magazine. In this way a block is produced with each feeder cycle. The blocks are in the delivery, staggered if necessary, ready for the operator to remove and place on pallets. Since the number of sheets per block can exceed the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
End products
Newspapers
number of feeder stations with some jobs, a partial block feeder is installed at the beginning of the assembler. The assembling then takes place in two steps. First of all, a part block is gathered. In the second step the part block is manually put into the part block feeder. The additional sheets are gathered on the part block. Figure 7.2-50 shows a gathering machine; loading the feeder from the pallets is done manually. The number of feeders in a gathering machine depends on the job structure of the print finishing company. The machines are made up of sections of three or four feeders. It should be possible to produce at least 90% of the jobs without pre-gathering (i.e., without a part block feeder). Gathering machines can be equipped with more than forty feeders.
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The principle of gathering (stacker principle) Sig 3
The sorter principle
Feeder
Sig 3
Sig 2
Feeder
Assembler (Sorter with n bins) Block 1
Block 2
Assembler (stacker) (Sig 1) Sig 1
Block 3
Block
For each signature batch there is a feeder (sheet separator). The separated signatures are put into the stacker one after the other so that a block with consecutive signatures results. The block is ready for the next finishing process. Conventional bookbinderies make use of the principle of gathering. The number of active feeders corresponds to the number of signatures per block.
A signature 1 batch is separated in the feeder. Each individual signature is laid into a separate bin/tray. After that, the same procedure occurs with the signature 2 batch, etc. When all signature quantities have been separated, each bin contains a block with consecutive signatures. In conventional bookbinderies, the sorter principle is not expedient, since the number of the bins would have to correspond to that of the print volume.
Table 7.2-13 Basic principles of the assembling techniques using stacker (gathering; inserting or collating) or sorter (collating)
Part block temporary storage
Folded sheet temporary storage Pre-storage Feeder Block store
Delivery
Block assembler (gathering chain)
Part block feeder
Fig. 7.2-49 Structure of a gathering machine (collating individual sheets or signatures)
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Fig. 7.2-50 Gathering machine
Pile support Magazine Pile support
Magazine
Tilt-up sucker
Gripper drum
Pincer gripper
Raceway
Tilt-up sucker Raceway
a
Conveyor chain with pusher
b
Fig. 7.2-51 Feeder variants in gathering machines. a Feeder with pincer grippers; b Feeder with gripper drum
Figure 7.2-51 shows two typical feeder principles in gathering machines. The same design elements are found in both versions: • Folded sheet pile magazine for continual insertion of signatures by the operator or by loading systems with a front underedge separation of sheets to be separated. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• Separating the separation edge of the sheet using suction air (tilt-up sucker). • Pile support for the sheets remaining in the magazine; the support is swung out of the way when the tilt-up sucker pulls off the back edge of the bottom sheet in the pile. • Removal using pincers or drum grippers and simultaneous transportation to the raceway.
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• Conveyor chain with pushers. The continual pusher movement runs at an angle of 90° to the separation motion. A serious disadvantage in this design is that the acceleration of the sheets during a working cycle of the machine changes continually. When removing the sheet from the magazine there is an acceleration that is then stopped during feeding in the raceway. Finally the pusher of the conveyor chain accelerates the sheet to the transport speed in the raceway. The intermittent acceleration of the sheets in the raceway can result in damage to the sheet and unstable machine operation. Therefore high-speed machines (more than 10000 products/h) are equipped with a sheet accelerator between each magazine and raceway, which “gently” brings the sheet to the effective chain speed. Solutions applied for rectifying the separating and gathering movement are rotating the magazine and gripper drum by 90° or modifying the separating principle. In addition to the nominal output, the effectiveness of machines is determined mainly by the degree of automation of the loading unit and the delivery (operating effort). The following are alternatives for loading: • Manual insertion of sheet piles into feeder magazines. One operator can manually load between three and eight magazines depending on the operating speed and sheet volume. • Loading the gathering machines with bundles (fig. 7.3.-6). One operator can load approximately 15 bundle feeders (see sec. 7.3.1.3). • Loading folded sheet reels (fig. 7.3.-7). One operator can load all the reel feeders of a gathering machine during operation (see sec. 7.3.1.3). The following processing errors can occur with gathering machines: • missing sheets in the block, • double sheets in the block, • mixed up sheets in the block. Each deficiency results in rejection of the product. To avoid missing or double sheets, grippers are equipped with sheet thickness detectors. To avoid mixed up sheets, the correct position of each folded sheet must be checked in each block. Common collation checking processes are:
• Manual check of collating marks (fig. 7.2.-52). Each signature gets a collating mark printed in the back edge, which moves by a mark length each time in ascending signature sequence. Thus the correct sheet sequence is recognizable at a glance. The process does not work, however, when the gathering machine is rigidly interlinked with the binding machine in workflows. • Electronic detection of collating marks. To determine whether there are collating marks in the scan field or not, optical scanning heads located in each magazine are used. The marks are conveniently positioned in the trim. • Barcode scanning. Each signature receives a barcode (area: 5 mm ¥ 5 mm) at the same place, which is put into the trim. Electronic barcode scanning takes place in each magazine. • Electronic determination of the ink density on the print surface. In a simple case a density value of a defined sheet surface area is determined. Fault clearing takes place if the density deviation tolerances are not met. To increase reliability (particularly of integrated gathering machines in binding lines) the defective product is channeled out of the system in the case of individual errors, without the system stopping. Collators for Individual Sheets Collators are mainly used in companies or departments that • produce products for office communication in small and very small volumes, • produce sets of forms,
Mixed up sheets Double sheets Missing sheet Fig. 7.2-52 Collating marks used for checking the correct sequence of signatures © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
• produce wall calendars or calendar types of products. The machines mainly differ in the arrangement of the magazine, as especial attention is directed at space-saving constructions in the business field concerned. Distinguishing features of collators are listed in table 7.2-14. Tower collators dominate in finishing businesses (these are postpress companies that mainly produce simple products). These machines are very variable since • they can also collate folded sheets (not as efficient), • if required, several towers can be interconnected in tandem, • they can be interlinked with binding units (e.g., wire stitching machine and front cutter) to one integrated workflow. Figure 7.2-53 shows a tower collator. The number of gathering towers connected in series is determined by the scope of pages that are normally to be processed. Two collating towers have been linked to a binding line with a saddle stitching unit and a front trimmer (only the front edge is trimmed). For large format sheets (≥ A3) there is a range of special collators that are frequently the base module of binding lines. The characteristic structure of such a workflow can be seen in figure 7.2-54. The machine is arranged in a horizontal line and equipped with special pallet feeders. Sheets can be placed here up to a height of 65 cm. The sheets are separated from above using suction rods. The assembler moves cyclically in front of the pallet feeders. The collating machine can be linked up with various units for different binding methods, such as wire stitching or wire comb binding.
7.2.4.3 Gathering into Single-layer Blocks Collating folded sheets to produce single-layer blocks generally takes place in gathering machines that are integrated with wire saddle-stitching units and trimmers for the three-side trim. The production lines are referred to in practice as gatherer-stitchers. The gathering unit is the basis module of such lines. Gathering machines have the same function groups as collators: • folded sheet feeder corresponding to the number of folded sheets per block, • block gatherer, • delivery. To be able to place the sheets within one another, they must be open in the middle. They are then put on a saddle bar one after the other. The saddle bar has an assembling chain with pushers. The chain transports the sheets from feeder to feeder, so that an inserted block is produced. The principles are sketched in figures 7.2-55 and 7.2-56. For separating and opening the folded signatures, two methods are mainly used: • sheet separation and opening according to the rotating transfer technique, • sheet separation and opening according to the rolloff principle. An example of the rotating transfer technique is shown in figure 7.2-56. The folded signatures are piled into the feeder by the operator. The “bottom” sheet is separated. To do this the back edge is pulled off the pile by a tilt-up sucker, such that the gripper of the transfer drum can separate the sheet. At the rear stop the pick-up drum gripper opens, and the sheet is taken at the front edge by the gripper of the
Feeder arrangement
Assembler collects the separated sheets from each feeder
Horizontal arrangement of the feeders in one line
Case 1: Assembler completes a circulatory movement
Horizontal arrangement of the feeders on a circular disc
Case 2: Several assemblers rotate above a feeder carousel
Vertical arrangement (tower) of the feeders in one line
Case 4: Assemblers move past the feeders and pick up the separated sheets
Table 7.2-14 Distinguishing features of collators © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Feeders transport the separated sheets to the assembler
Case 3: Feeders rotate underneath the assembler and deliver the separated folded sheets
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Collating towers
Unit for saddle stitching, folding, and front trim operations
Fig. 7.2-53 Tower collator (vertical feeder arrangement) with further sheet processing (Horizon)
Fig. 7.2-54 Calendar collating machine with horizontal line feeder arrangement (Theisen und Bonitz)
Sheet gathering machine
Production of calendars Vertical pile feeder
counter-rotating transfer drum. The folded signature has a gripper fold, which is the designation for a paper surface protruding on the front edge of the folded signature in front of or after the center of the sheet. The transfer drum gripper seizes the gripper fold, such that it only holds the sheet half that is lying on the drum. With the transport movement running in the opposite direction the opener drum gripper takes over the free front edge, whereby the sheet can be opened and put down on the saddle bar. The gripper fold is the most reliable design element for opening sheets at the centerfold.
An alternative to the gripper fold is to open folded signatures using rotating suckers. To do so, the folded signatures on the head edge must be closed. This requires that the penultimate and the last fold of the folded signatures are executed as a center cross fold. For separating and opening folded signatures using roll-off feeders (fig. 7.2-57), a gripper fold is also advantageous. The well-known “Hepp feeder” is presented as an example. The rolling drum rotates against the back edge under the folded sheet pile of the magazine. Rolloff rollers support the pile. The roll-off drum is equipped with three suction rollers. Their suckers car© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Intermediate stock for folded sheets Pre-storage
Feeders with open sheets
Transfer to the cover feeder or the wire-stitching machine
Saddle bar with gathering chain Fig. 7.2-55 Structure of a gatherer for single-layer blocks
Phase 1
Phase 2 Upright sheet feeder
Tilt-up sucker Pick-up drum Rear stop
Sheet holder
Grippers
Transfer drum
Grippers Saddle
Opening drum
Fig. 7.2-56 Feeder for gatherers based on the transfer technique (Heidelberg)
ry out a cycloidal movement against the direction of run of the roll-off drum. The roll-off process is designed such that the sucker seizes the bottom-most folded sheet at the back edge and takes it along into the inside of the roll-off drum (upper © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
red sheet). After one suction roller revolution, the back edge of the sheet arrives at the clamping lever and is fixed there. The second suction roller revolution places the sheet in the sheet holder (lower red sheet). The sheet jogger in the roll-off drum pushes the sheet out of the sheet
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Fig. 7.2-57 Roll-off feeder (Hepp feeder) [7.2-2]
Magazine
Sheet jogger Roll-off roller Clamp leever Suction roller
Roll-off drum Sheet holder
Opening rollers for suction and prefold opening Sucker
holder onto the opener roller pair, where it is opened by the grippers (gripper fold sheet) or suckers (cross fold sheet) and deposited on the saddle bar. The feeders of conventional gatherer stitchers are connected in series (fig. 7.2-58). The open sheets deposited on the saddle bar are transported by the pushers on the saddle chain to the next feeder. An output of up to 20000 cycles/h can be reached with the feeder magazines arranged in a line. The demands of magazine producers for systems with a considerably higher nominal output has result-
Trimming unit
Delivery
Gripper
ed in the development of so-called drum processing systems. Here the sheets are transported to the next station in a three-dimensional curve. Figure 7.2-59 shows the operating principle of a conveyor drum. The “drum” is a folded signature transport cylinder. Up to forty saddle bars are mounted on the cylinder circumference. The processing stations are located above the cylinder alongside the surface line. After the sheets have been put onto the respective bar by a chain conveyor, they are rotated around the cylinder shaft with simultaneous continuous shift in the surface line
Stitcher
Feeder
Gatherer
Fig. 7.2-58 Wire-stitching production line/gatherer-stitcher (Stitchmaster ST 250, Heidelberg) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
direction. Applying this method of conveyance enables an increase in output of brochure assemblers of up to 40000 products per hour. This output cannot be reached with manual loading. Therefore drum processing machines are mostly equipped with folded signature reel feeders (fig. 7.3-7) or, as a less effective alternative, with bundle feeders. Figure 7.2-60 shows a saddle-stitcher conveyor drum system from Ferag for the production of magazines.
Sub-products from the feeders Cards
7.2.5
Binding Blocks
7.2.5.1 Characterization of the Process Binding blocks is the production of a temporary or permanent connection of the collated book block by positive, non-positive, or bond jointing processes (i.e., held together by force, fixing elements or adhesives).
Products gathered
Processing station Folded sheets Transport/saddle bar
Conveyor drum Conveyance of the sheet by cross pushers (chain conveyor within the drum for each saddle bar) Fig. 7.2-59 Operating principle of a conveyor drum processing system (Ferag)
Fig. 7.2-60 Saddle-stitcher drum for the production of magazines (Ferag) © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Materials and partial products to be processed are: • collated multi-layer blocks and loose-leaf blocks, • inserted single-layer blocks, • folded sheets. Very often binding occurs in several elementary processes. Both the link-up of elementary processes in workflows (e.g., perfect binding) as well as a non-interlinked process flow (e.g., thread sewing) is usual here. Auxiliary materials: • Fabric threads or wire are deployed as jointing media for positive binding methods. • Adhesives are used for bonding processes. Threadbinding methods for multi-layer blocks usually receive additional glue application. • To cover the adhesive binding and for better binding strength, paper lining (backing) strips, muslin (fabric), or compounds are used. Lining is also taken for stiffening and strengthening the binding. • Single sheet binding systems use different jointing elements such as wire or plastic spirals, wire or plastic combs, rings, cords, and also screws. • Non-positive (or pressure-based) jointing processes are based on the use of rail-shaped metal or plastic staples. Other aspects for structuring the means of binding are: • The jointing medium location In the back fold of the folded signature or on the rear edge of sheets (e.g., for thread-sewing books, adhesive binding, back margin wire stitching); before the back edge through the leaf surfaces (stitching on the side). Side-wire stitching is an example. • Differentiation of folded signature binding and block binding Uniform and simultaneous binding of the block parts and the block is usual (e.g., when threadsewing books, the folded signature is stitched to itself as well as to others); when binding folded signatures, the sheets can be bound independently of the block using a different process (e.g., with thread-sealing). In book binderies, the positive jointing process with threads or wire is colloquially referred to as stitching,
bond-jointing is called perfect binding or block gluing. The examples in table 7.2-15 will give an idea of the many different ways block binding is practiced and some final products produced with this process are listed in table 7.2-16. 7.2.5.2 Thread-Stitching Books The thread-stitching of books is a block binding process where the connection of the inner sheet sections and the sheets to one another is primarily achieved by fabric threads. This connection is improved by gluing, gauzing and/or backlining or backstripping, as well as subsequent backlining of the block. Thread-stitching of a book block comprises the following elementary processes (see table 7.2-17): • Thread-stitching: form-fit connections of sheet sections and sheets. • Gluing block spines: glued connections of stitched sheets in a block. • Gauzing blocks: additional reinforcing of the binding by sticking a gauze strip on the block spine which overlaps the front and back side of the block spine by 1 to 2 cm. • Back-stripping blocks: gluing a paper or paper gauze laminate to the block which overlaps at the sides. As an alternative to gluing and gauzing: the sheets are simultaneously stitched onto a gauze strip in the thread stitching machine; then it is only a case of gluing. Thread-stitching by machine is modeled on the traditional work done by hand. The following operations are to be carried out in the book thread-stitching machine: • loading the gathered blocks into the stitcher, • separating and opening the folded sheets, • stitching the separated folded sheet to itself and to the previous sheet, • cutting off the binding threads between the blocks, • delivery of the threaded blocks. The typical function groups of thread-stitching machines are represented in figure 7.2-61. The feeders of thread-stitching machines must separate the sheets, open them in the center, and lay them on the saddle, since book thread-stitching is done through the back edge. Therefore the folded signatures © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Multi-layer blocks with binding in the back spine Thread-stitching
Thread-sealing
Perfect binding
The back edge of all the folded signatures is cut off and the sheets are bound with adhesive.
During folding, the sheets are bound with thread staples; the block is then glued together after completion of the collating process.
Each sheet is stitched individually to the previous one.
Multi-layer blocks with lateral binding Side wire stitching
Side thread-stitching
Wire staples are pushed into the block surfaces.
Stitching for thin blocks. Binding single-layer blocks
Wire saddle-stitching
Spine thread-stitching Upper thread Lower thread
Wire staples are inserted from the inside to the outside or from the outside to the inside into the spine (for magazines). . Saddle stitch knot thread sewing
A stitch seam is placed in the binding margin (for identity cards, passports). Cord binding
A thread is put through the binding margin and knotted (for school exercise books). . Loose leaf binding systems Plastic comb binding
A cylindrical rolled plastic comb is inserted into prepunched holes in the block. Spiral binding
A cord is tied in the binding margin around the cover and sheet and then knotted (for documents).
Wire comb binding
A cylindrical rolled wire comb is inserted into prepunched holes of the block (also called wire-o-binding). Binding mechanism
The sheets contain a two, four or six-fold lateral hole, into which the clips of the binding mechanism are inserted (file). A plastic or wire spiral is inserted into the prepunched or predrilled openings of the block.
Table 7.2-15 Block binding variants © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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7 Print Finishing Processes
to be stitched have a central fold as the final one. The feeders perform the same functions as the feeder in the gatherer stitchers (see sec. 7.2.4.3), so that the same technical principles are applied:
cessively lift the sheets to the center of the sheet. These methods have been developed so that a great variety of folded sheets can be processed (open at the head, prepared). The stitching takes place with tools that are installed in the swinging saddle as well as in a stationary position above the swinging saddle. Figure 7.2-62 shows a stitching process in four phases. At first the piercing needles punch holes into the back binding margin. The sewing needles, which carry the thread, and the hook-shaped needle are pushed from above into the holes. The thread remover “hooks” the threads during the crosswise movement into the hook-shaped needles. The process is completed when the needles have returned to their original position. When the saddle swings backwards, the sheet remains under the stitching unit on the block delivery. Alongside the back edge there are three to five parallel stitching units depending on the sheet height. In this way one sheet is stitched per operating cycle. When all sheets of a block are connected, an empty stitch is executed to knot the threads (if there is no empty stitch, the threads are sealed). Then the threads are cut off.
• Folded sheets have gripper margins; opening operation is done with gripper drums. • Opening right-angle folded sheets using suction drums. In addition a series of further feeder principles has become established for opening the folded sheets up to the center of the sheet by machine leafing. On the feeder in figure 7.2-61 several rotating suction levers suc-
Intermediate products
End products
Blocks for: • Hardcovers • Multi-layer brochures • Single-layer brochures
Finished by: • Spiral binding • Comb binding • Perfect binding • Binding mechanism
Table 7.2-16 Book binding products
Table 7.2-17 Technological variants of thread-stitching
Conventional thread-stitching technique
Thread-stitching and back-stripping
Folded sheet store
Folded sheet store
Stitching
Stitching
Block store
Block store
Gluing and gauzing
Back-stripping
Equipping block
Finishing
Backlining Finishing
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Fig. 7.2-61 Components of thread-stitching machines (Bookthread-stitching machine F 140, Heidelberg)
Thread spool holder
Stitching station
Control unit
Magazine for collated folded sheets (book blocks)
Sheet infeed Pressing and gluing station
Fig. 7.2-62 Simplified illustration of the thread-stitching principle brochure stitch
Saddle with pusher chain
Back fold
Sewing needle
Sewing needle
Thread mover
Piercing needles (for holes in the back fold)
Piercing needles
Sewing needle Hook-shaped needle
Hook-shaped needle Sewing needle
3
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2
Hook-shaped needle
Thread mover Hook-shaped needle
Piercing needles
Sheet is deposited on the saddle
Inner thread
1
Thread mover
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Thread mover
Piercing needles
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7 Print Finishing Processes
With older stitching machines it is possible to place a gauze strip over the binding surface and to integrate it in the sewing process. This results in a better binding stability. The wide-meshed gauze is penetrated by the adhesive during gluing, so that the gluing of the spines of the block is ensured. In addition to the brochure stitch shown in figure 7.2-62, other types of brochure stitches are practiced (kettle stitching, staggered stitching). The staggered stitch line is used to reduce the raising of the block spine (thread build-up). It proves disadvantageous for the process organization in industrial binderies that each folded sheet requires one work cycle for stitching, after a whole book block has been produced in the gathering process per work cycle. This change in the output rate complicates the coordination of workflows. However, due to the high binding quality of thread-stitched books, threadstitch workflows have been developed despite the difficulties referred to. Figure 7.2-63 shows the structure of such production lines. It is possible to include backstripping or gluing as well as the following equipping processes in the workflow. Quality of the Binding with Thread-Stitching. Threadstitching is a reliable binding process that in addition permits good qualities of wear and tear. The following stand out: • Binding stability: Removing individual block sections from the stitched block is only possible by damaging the paper. • Ease of opening: Thread-stitched blocks can be opened up easily up to the spine.
There may be flaws: • If the stitching is too loose: A sheet overlap may result, where the inner sheet sections push forwards after the three-page trim. • Due to glue lines in the center of the folded signature: Glue lines are particularly disturbing to the eye with art paper printed up to the back edge. The cause is mainly too thin adhesive, which runs into the thread holes when back gluing/back-stripping. 7.2.5.3 Perfect Binding Perfect binding is the dominant binding process in industrial book and brochure production today. The main reason for this is the high efficiency of the process. This is achieved because perfect binding has the same productivity rate (block/work cycle) as gathering and trimming. This enables efficient workflows to be set up. Endeavoring to make perfect binding more hard-wearing, a series of variants were developed, which are illustrated in tables 7.2-18 and 7.2.-19. At present the spine routing method is used in all perfect binding machines. To achieve reliable binding, careful spine machining and the correct choice of adhesive are particularly important. With perfect binding block production processes can be automated. Figure 7.2-64 shows a perfect binder as installed in many industrial finishing enterprises. Such systems are characterized by: • interlinking with gathering and trimming machine (very common),
Temporary stores
Further finishing steps
Gathering
Dividing Book threadproduct flow stitching
Uniting product flow
Back-stripping (incl. application of adhesive)
Fig. 7.2-63 Basic principle of thread-stitching lines © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Perfect binding/Spine routing principle
Perfect binding/Fan principle
Backing strip Adhesive Block of sheets (spine routed)
With the spine routing principle, the back edges of the block's folded sheets are removed with the help of knives or cutters. The result is a sheet block. Adhesive is applied to the sheet edges. The adhesive is covered with a backing strip.
Fan binding, also called padding is the original method of perfect binding. By fanning out the block spine while applying adhesive, a narrow strip of glue reaches between the sheet edges. The glue surrounds the sheets in the joining area, which increases the stability of the binding.
Table 7.2-18 Principles of perfect binding
• the large number of variable processes for binding various product types with varying demands on binding quality, • the module concept by which the appropriate setup can be made available to the user. The diagram (fig. 7.2-65) of the inner structure of the perfect binder (as shown in fig. 7.2-64) shows a possible arrangement of processing stations. The following are characteristic elements of perfect binding systems: • Endpaper feeder stations. Here the endpapers are fed to be then bound together with the block (for adhesive binding of hardcovers). • Jogging station. Here the folded sheets of the book block are aligned on the block spine and block head. • Transport system. The block to be processed must be able to run through the necessary elementary processes while securely clamped. • Spine processing station. The back edges of the folded sheets are cut off. Undercutting devices, brushes and suckers for paper dust removal are used to improve adhesion in the potential jointing areas. • Gluing unit. The gluing unit is used for applying glue. Different adhesive systems are in use for binding; they are selected according to the paper to be processed. Each adhesive system requires its own gluing unit construction and influences the structure of the subsequent stations. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• Lining station. This is used for binding book blocks for hardcovers. The backing strip paper covers the adhesive surface and reinforces the hinge. The station is switched off for brochure production. • Cover scoring and feed station. This is used for processing multi-layer brochures. The cover is pressed onto the open adhesive surface. It must previously have been separated from a pile and scored. There are various feeder variants. • Cover aligning and pressing station. The cover is formed around the block using pressing tools. • Dryer. Gluing is stabilized in the dryer with aqueous dispersions. High frequency drying (example) is integrated in the adhesive/perfect binder. No dryer is required when processing hot-melt materials. Hotmelt materials must be cooled down. • Delivery. The delivery of the bound blocks must be designed such that there is no block deformation and optimum further processing is achieved. Depending on the degree of coupling (the next processing step follows directly after or the products are put into temporary storage) various design variants are used. Two gluing units are installed in the system shown in figure 7.2-65, so two adhesive layers are applied to the blocks, separated by infrared intermediate drying. The first very thin and low viscous adhesive layer is to ensure optimum adhesion, while the second highly viscous layer generates a flexible “clamp,” so that the block does not break in two at the jointing point.
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Table 7.2-19 Perfect binding variants
Processing principle
Drawing
Quarter sheet binding
Adhesive
Backing strip
Block
By doubling the adhesive surface in the binding, the binding strength increases compared with the individual sheet binding. However, the process is unsuitable for the industrial bindery, as there are no folding layouts which can be efficiently implemented and which consist of more than four pages, folded such that the spine consists of 1-fold edges.
Notch binding Adhesive
This process (also referred to as perforating binding) occurs in two stages. Firstly the back edge is perforated in the folder using a Backing strip special punch knife, so that the grooves can be filled with adhesive. Gluing the spine and Punch slits/ back-stripping of the block takes place in the notches in the perfect binder. The spine routing station is folded signature put out of action. Block
Flexo-stable binding Adhesive Backing strip Felt strip Block
Fig. 7.2-64 Perfect binding machine (Ratiobinder, Kolbus; see also fig. 7.2-65)
Flexo-stable binding describes the aim of obtaining maximum perfect binding strength. Here the back edges in the area of the head and foot trim are not routed off. This requires an additional control of the routing unit in the perfect binder. To reinforce the opening hinge and to counter-balance the spine, a felt strip is glued in the area routed off. The join is covered with a backing strip.
Cover feeder
Back-stripping unit
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Cover feeder
Alignment and pressing station Dryer
Warming station
Delivery
Block infeed
Spine processing
Main gluing station
Infrared intermediate drying
Back-stripping unit (Lining station)
2nd gluing station
Side gluing station
Feeder (to the clamping and transport system) Jogging Fig. 7.2-65 Diagram of a perfect binding machine (Ratiobinder, Kolbus)
In all well-known perfect binding machines the same effective processes are carried out using various means. Differences between the machine types, which influence both the output as well as the product quality, result mainly from the • clamping and transport systems for the blocks, • block spine processing, • glue and adhesive application systems. Clamping and Transport Systems The most important configuration variants are: • Plate chain perfect binders. Assisted by block feeding the gathered blocks are pushed between two transport chains aligned in parallel and equipped with pressure plates. The distance between the blocks is approximately 2 to 4 cm. The maximum length of the transport system is 10 m, since the clamping forces necessary for processing increase proportionately to the length of the chain carrier. Plate chain binders are mainly used for perfect binding of hardcovers and for back-stripping of stitched blocks. Plate chains are open transport systems (fig. 7.2-69). • Carousel perfect binders. The machine clamps are located at the circumference of a rotating table. The processing stations are positioned under the table. Carousel perfect binders are a special form of the clamp carriage machines. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
• Clamp carriage perfect binder. Clamp carriage perfect binders are conceived for complex binding lines on which different product types can be produced. The number of work stations of this modular concept is matched to the user’s requirements. Depending on the equipment level, up to sixty-five clamp carriages are possible. Clamp carriage chains represent a closed transport system. The machine diagram shown in figure 7.2-66 corresponds to the system illustrated in figure 7.2-65. The system illustrated is equipped with thirty-two clamps. The clamp length is approximately 50 cm. Each clamp has a separate block clamping unit, which must be
Chain with clamp carriage
Dryer Cover feeder
Delivery
Feeder
Spine preparation
Gluing station
Back-stripping station
Fig. 7.2-66 Diagram (overhead view) of the clamp carriage perfect binder (Kolbus)
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7 Print Finishing Processes
opened for inserting the block aligned at the head and spine via a stationary mechanism.
sive substance, fillers and diluting agents are added. The setting occurs in two phases:
Block Spine Processing The back edges are cut off from the folded sheets using circular knives or circular rotary grinders. The interface must not become too hot so that the structure of the sheets is not damaged (burning or melting). To increase the application surface of the spine, notch cutters or routing discs are used. Finally, the adhesive area must be cleared of paper dust and torn cellulose fibers by brushing and suction. It has been proven that, above all, the processes of routing (levelling) have a strong influence on the strength of the binding. With special routing tools the sheet tear resistance can be increased by 10 to 20%. This knowledge led to the development of special routing systems among the leading perfect binding machine manufacturers, where not only groove lines, but a network of grooves is generated.
– a fast, physical setting process by solidification (3 to 5 min), – a slow running chemical setting process during which the interlacing of prepolymers takes place under the influence of air humidity and/or own moisture (adhesive that hardens with moisture). The final strength is reached after approximately three days.
Block Spine Gluing The type of adhesive used and the gluing station must be matched for the application of adhesive onto the block spine. The adhesive properties determine usage. For perfect binding three basic types are used with many modifications: • Polyvinyl acetate dispersions (dispersion cold glue with approximately 50% solids content). PVAC is a polymer of vinyl acetate that is kept in aqueous dispersions. Polyvinyl alcohol is used as a protective colloid (avoiding precipitation). The dispersion contains between 10 and 15% softener, as well as additional substances that influence the physical properties. The particle size is 0.5–5 µm. • Hot-melt adhesives. Ethyl vinyl acetate copolymerides are used as basic polymers for hot-melts in the graphic arts industry. Hot-melt adhesives are three-substance systems. They are composed of approximately 50% basic polymer, approximately 30% sticky resins to improve adhesion (including colophonium), and approximately 20% softeners (in hot-melts paraffin). In addition there are heat stabilizing antioxidant agents (up to 1%). The specific mix results in the desired adhesive properties. • Polyurethane adhesives (PUR). PUR hot-melts are prepolymers with NCO end groups. Prepolymers are prepolymerized molecule chains capable of further polymerization. In addition to the basic adhe-
Applying Adhesive in Perfect Binders The application of adhesive is generally carried out with roller gluing units (fig. 7.2-67). In general two gluing form rollers with blade metering are used. A counter-rotating spin roller at the exit of the gluing unit smooths the adhesive layer on the block spine (mainly) when processing hot-melt material and prevents the glue strips from soiling the machine. In addition, hotmelt gluing units require heating and exact temperature regulation, since the application temperature (150–190°C) has a great influence on the binding quality. Hot-melt adhesives are preheated in a premelter to the approximate gluing temperature. In some gluing units the gluing rollers are engaged at an angle to the block direction of travel, or conical form rollers are used (as with padding, see table 7.2-18), so that a fan effect results. In carousel perfect binders the adhesive is applied between the sheet edges (fan principle) during the circular block movement. For PUR adhesives, the glue troughs are particularly small and protected by covers. This is necessary, since
Book block
Book block
Blade
Trough
Spin roller
Glue roller Glue Roller gap adjustment (adhesive film thickness)
Fig. 7.2-67 Two-roller gluing unit [7.2-4] © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
the adhesive sets insolubly due to the air humidity. Therefore the volume of adhesive in the gluing unit must be removed once the work is completed. A further improvement in the intensity of adhesive application can be made by installing several gluing units in one clamp carriage perfect binder. Those gluing units apply adhesives of differing viscosity and harmonized adhesive properties (see fig. 7.2-65). The first application of glue with a low viscosity adhesive provides a close connection between the sheet edges and the adhesive substances. To increase the thickness of the layer (clamp effect on the block spine) a higher viscosity adhesive is applied before the adhesive layer is covered. Variants are: • two layer dispersion application, • two layer hot-melt adhesive application (two-shot method), • three layer hot-melt adhesive application (tripleshot method), • combined dispersion/hot-melt adhesive application (primer-two-shot process). The first dispersion adhesive application requires short shock drying, so that the second adhesive layer can safely be applied and a sufficient adhesion is achieved between the adhesive layers. Occasionally an insert of fibrous material is placed between the adhesive layers. Side Gluing Unit Side gluing units are required to smear a 1 to 2 cm wide adhesive strip on the front and rear block surface of the book block. This is necessary in order to • put on an overlapping backing strip or • to glue brochure covers on the sides. Dispersion or hot-melt materials are used for side gluing. The tools are disks that transport the adhesive from one of the glue pots located under the clamp carriage and apply it. Nozzle gluing units can also be used. Lining/Back-Stripping Station After the application of glue, book blocks are backstripped according to a lengthways or crossways lining principle. • Crossways lining principle (fig. 7.2-68). From a lining material roll, whose width corresponds to the block length, a web is transported crossways to the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Block
Cross cutter Circular knife Unwinding unit
Backing strip
Lift board Backing strip material
Fig. 7.2-68 Crossways lining station (back-stripping machine) [7.2-4]
direction of block movement and pressed onto the adhesive surface while it is cut off simultaneously. Before, the block was coated laterally with adhesive up to the overlapping height of the back-stripping material. Very firm crimped paper is normally used as back-stripping material. To increase the block strength, large perfect binding systems can be equipped with two crossways lining stations connected in series, where gauze is first pressed onto the adhesive surface by means of compressed air. The crossways lining principle is used in clamp carriage machines. • Lengthways lining principle (fig. 7.2-69). Lengthways lining is integrated in plate chain machines. In the lengthways lining process a glued lining web sized to strip width is put around the book blocks in the direction of run and pressed down. The web is separated in the machine after being inserted. Lengthways lining produces a very close link between adhesive and lining strip. Cover Feeder With clamp carriage perfect binders, the cover feeder station is positioned on the turning circle (see fig. 7.2-66). This leaves space for manual feeding. Three principles are used: • upright sheet/flat pile feeder (e.g., fig. 7.2-56), • vertical pile feeder (e.g., fig. 7.2-54), • stream feeder (e.g., fig. 7.2-32), whereby the stream feeder is used most frequently, since the simple design principle guarantees good reli-
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Fig. 7.2-69 Lengthways lining (back-stripping) principle in a plate chain perfect binder (Sigloch)
Book block
Plate chain
Lining roll Gluing unit for the lining strip
ability. The covers are separated and transported in the direction of block movement. In plate chain machines the feeder is placed below the level of the plate chain. Block Stabilizing To dry dispersion adhesives, the dispersing agent (water) must firstly be vaporized by energy input. In modern perfect binding systems this is done with high frequency dryers. To trim the blocks in the workflow, cooling from approximately 180 °C to about 60 to 80 °C is necessary. External transport belts are used as cooling lines. The necessary cooling time of 2 to 5 minutes requires a cooling line of 50 to 100 m. The cooling lines are used simultaneously as a transport device to the next processing step. Hot-melt adhesives are cooled down in the same way. Alternatives to high frequency drying (heating up the water by microwaves, whose frequency corresponds to the main resonance frequency of the water) are the convection drying (heated gas is routed around the block) and the infrared drying processes (where the high-energy electromagnetic radiation supplied is converted into heat energy in the product being dried).
• invisible glue strips, • form stability of the book during use. Both the binding process as well as the properties of the material to be processed (paper, adhesive) and the outer product characteristics (format, block thickness) have an influence on the adhesive quality. The quality analyses in perfect binding relate in practice mainly to the block strength, as the customer usually requires a certain binding process when placing an order, and is aware (or should be) of the “normal” framework of additional characteristics for use. The method used most frequently to assess block strength is the pull test. If there is an appropriate test device this test does not require much time and allows a good assessment of the durability of the books and brochures in usage. The pull test (fig. 7.2-70) is a static testing method, where an individual sheet is stressed using force over the whole sheet length vertically to the block spine. The force F is uniformly increased until the sheet tears. The tearing strength of the sheet Fz is the quotient of load at tearing F and block height h in N/cm, Fz = F/h.
Perfect Binding Quality – Prognosis and Checking Problems The quality characteristics of the binding are:
The standard values summarized in table 7.2-20 show the rating of perfect binding strength.
• binding strength, • ease of opening the book/brochure, • compactness of the book block,
Prognosis of Sheet Tearing Strength. The prognosis of the binding strength has a special significance with perfect binding, since the possibility of insufficient block © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Pull force F
Sheet clamping device
Block height h
Book block
Clamping fixture for the test object
Fig. 7.2-70 Pull test
Rating
General scale
FOGRA standard in N/cm
Bad binding strength Sufficient binding strength Good binding strength Very good binding strength
less than 4.5 4.5 ... 6.2 6.3 ... 7.2 more than 7.2
less than 5.5 5.6 ... 6.5 6.6 ... 7.7 more than 7.5
Table 7.2-20 Pull data (sheet tearing strength Fz in N/cm)
strength of whole jobs cannot be ruled out. However, the test can only be carried out on fully stabilized blocks, that is, after binding the job. Moreover, the bound products are destroyed in the test. The sheet tearing strength is mainly influenced by the following parameters: • Machine: construction principle (transport system, routing and roughening module, gluing unit arrangement, type of drying/cooling), machine setting (sharpness of the cutting tools, adhesive temperature, adhesive application thickness, blade and spinner setting). • Adhesive: adhesive type (dispersion, hot-melt, PUR glue), adhesive viscosity, open time of adhesives. • Paper properties: paper thickness, paper grain direction, paper kind (differentiation between uncoated paper and art paper/illustration printing paper is advisable), “inherent” paper properties (e.g., degree of gluing, paper thickness, paper grammage, paper smoothness). © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
Due to the many influences it is not possible to make an overall applicable prognosis. Specific tests must be carried out for each machine configuration, and standards can be specified as a result. When properly set (the setting instructions should be precisely adhered to) the main influencing variable for a machine is the paper grade used. Because of the significance of the perfect binding strength for industrial binderies the following table contains some useful information on the suitability of frequently used printing papers (table 7.2-21). In the development of printing paper the trend is towards filled and coated varieties, which leads to an improvement in the printing gloss while using less primary fiber and generating fewer production costs. The interests of finishing are viewed as a subordinate problem here, if at all. That does not mean that the perfect binding capability is generally deteriorating. In the past, very good perfect binding results were achieved with modern paper constructions. On the other hand, the ability to predict the binding strength has seriously decreased. A solution to the problem is pre-production of test blocks with the job paper. This is often not possible due to deadlines. The development of a simple, fast, and cheap test process would be advisable, which would allow the bookbinder to immediately be able to estimate the paper binding strength prior to perfect binding with adequate certainty. 7.2.5.4 Thread-Sealing Perfect binding is an economic yet qualitatively unstable process. Thread-stitching leads to excellent binding quality but is too expensive for most products. As a compromise, thread-sealing was developed; a process that is more economic than thread-stitching and also more reliable and more user friendly than perfect binding. This process has two stages: • the binding process of folded sheets to one another with textile threads during folding and • the binding process of folded sheets to the block through block linings after gathering. The principle is shown in figure 7.2-71. During folding, a textile mixed fiber thread of cotton and polypropylene is pushed into the fold of the back edge and sealed on the spine of the sheet with help of a heated sealing tool. The staple length is approximately 12 mm, the spacing between the staples is 38 mm.
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Designation
Suitability for perfect binding
Newsprint paper
Newsprint paper is good for perfect binding, since it is an uncoated paper with little rigidity. The adhesive strength which can be attained is generally close to or above the load at rupture of the paper, which means the paper tears frequently during the pull test. There is no objection to the use of hot-melt adhesives.
Book paper
Book paper is very good for perfect binding, since the uncoated paper has little smoothness, a high load at rupture, and limited rigidity. The ease of opening of an adhesive bound block is worse than that of a stitched one, thus threadstitching is often used for fancy books despite the good perfect binding strength.
Bulky printing paper
In general, bulky printing paper has a high rigidity, so that the use of adhesive bound blocks overcomes the staple effect in the binding area, which results in a big decrease of the tolerable load tension. Frequently the reader breaks the staple tension by force. Therefore perfect binding is only of limited suitability for bulky printing paper. Despite this, such paper is frequently bound adhesively, because the pull test produces good to very good test results.
Thin printing paper, Bible paper
Thin printing paper is especially good for perfect binding since it • permits opening of the product in front of the joining edge due to its low rigidity, • has a high load at rupture compared to its thickness, • is machine finished. There is usually a cohesion rupture of the paper during the pull test. (The maximum relative sheet tearing strength is reached.)
Magazine paper, Rotogravure paper
With hot-melt adhesives good binding strength is generally achieved with magazine and rotogravure paper since the binding is less strained during use because of the low material rigidity. The risk of smearing the joining edge with coating because of the minimal coating strength is low. Problems occur when printed images extend over the binding margin up to the adhesive edge (bad moistening). Additionally there is a risk in this case of softener migration (change in the print image, disintegration of the perfect binding).
Art paper
Art paper is not good for perfect binding as generally it has too high a rigidity, the coating covers the cellulose fibers, and the coats (recently often multiple coats) have often been bonded with plastics. Perfect binding of art paper always represents a risk. Using PUR adhesives reduces the risk of sheets coming off. When processing unknown types of art paper a pre-run should be carried out before the perfect binding takes place.
Offset printing paper
Offset paper (uncoated paper) is good, but not as good as book paper for perfect binding, as it is usually smoother and more heavily glued (reducing the moistening if necessary).
Matte coated paper
Matte coated paper should be good for perfect binding because of its physical properties (limited rigidity, sufficient load at rupture). However, the coating is less concentrated and tends to smear the sheet edges when working on the spine. Furthermore, paper manufacturers are experimenting for cost-cutting reasons with the furnish (coating composition, binding agent) without taking account of adhesive properties. Overall this leads to a lot of uncertainty in prognosis for the adhesive strength. With perfect binding of products, which demand a good binding strength, pre-runs are therefore advisable. The most reliable binding results can be expected with PUR glues.
Recycled paper
The high proportion of secondary fibers in printing paper, combined with the finishing of the fiber material by coatings (mat and glossy coated), results increasingly in serious (unforeseen) loss of quality during perfect binding. When processing waste paper (de-inking) not all the binding agents or other dispersed plastic constituents or coating from the fiber material are removed. This binding agent residue is deposited in the hydrophilic pores of the cell pulp and reduces the wettability of the recycled paper (compared to that of the primary fibers). The reduction in adhesive properties is very difficult to forecast, so that tests prior to binding are advisable.
Table 7.2-21 Suitability of printing paper for perfect binding
© H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Sealing thread Glue
Folded sheet
a
Lining strip
b
Fig. 7.2-71 Thread-sealed product. a Thread-sealed folded sheet; b Book block made up of thread-sealed folded sheets
Since the sealing device is integrated into the folding machine, the production of thread-sealed sheets is achieved without additional manual operations. The gathered sealed sheets are bound to a block in perfect binders. The spine processing unit is deactivated. When lining blocks, the sealing staples are covered by the adhesive that gives the “inner” sheet binding its final strength. The binding strength in the block is guaranteed since the glue covers the entire spine of the sheets. The folding and sealing of bookbinding sheets takes place in folding/sealing units. The configuration of a folding/sealing device is shown in figure 7.2-72. First, the bookbinding sheets are folded in the first and second folding units. Here, the folding layout is optional. In figure 7.2-72, the possibility of a right-angle fold arises due to the position of the folding units to one another. In the sealing unit, located in front of the final fold, the sealing threads are stuck into and sealed in the final fold. For the final fold, a separate knife folding unit or a special folding funnel is employed. A final pressing of the spine fold is advisable. Figure 7.2-73 shows the currently used principle of thread-sealing. The sealing thread is grasped by a sealing chain, clamped, cut, and guided over the sealing line. Stapling © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
takes place there by means of circulating fork needle pairs, which push the ends of the thread through the back edge. The sealing of the free standing staple arms takes place with a stationary, heated sealing tool/rail at a temperature of between 250 and 350°C. In this process up to 32-page fold sealing sheets can be produced. Figure 7.2-74 shows a typical module arrangement of folding and thread-sealing machines. 7.2.5.5 Wire-Stitching Wire-stitching is a form-fit jointing method. With wire-stitching binding, wire staples are pushed through the sheets of a block and closed on the underside (fig. 7.2-75). Due to the shortcomings in quality for readers of wire-stitched printed products, such as: • danger of oxidation of the stitching, • danger of damage to the staple arms, and • poor aesthetic effect of the binding, the process is avoided in conventional bookbinding. It is due to the advantages of • • • •
the simple and safe working principle, the possibility of direct finishing in workflows, a secure block binding, and high economic efficiency,
that the process takes absolute priority in the production of magazines, multi-page advertising brochures, and similar products. The dominating process is that of the wire-stitching of single-layer brochures, for which two or more staples are inserted into the back fold. The staple closure usually takes place in the product interior. These products are colloquially called back-stitched brochures. The principal areas of use for wire-stitching are • Production of mass edition magazines. Gatherer-stitchers are used for the production of mass edition magazines. They are production lines which principally consist of a gathering module, a wire-stitching device and a module for three-side page trimming. For magazines with a few pages, wire-stitching modules are also integrated into web presses (see fig. 2.1-89). • Finishing simple printed products. Finishing is a special area of bookbinding in which only simple products,
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Fig. 7.2-72 Diagram of a folding and thread-sealing production line
Third folding unit
Second folding unit
Thread-sealing unit
Pressing unit
First folding unit
Delivery
Feeder
Fold sealing sheet
Fig. 7.2-73 The working principle of thread-sealing
Bookbinding sheet
Feeding the thread
Cut off operation
Thread is pushed through the binding edge Folded sheet
Hot-sealing tool
Folded sheet
Pressure pad
such as leaflets, back-stitched brochures, loose leaf brochures and similar are produced. The latest field of business is the processing of sheets which have been printed on digital printing systems using NIP technology. Production lines consisting of such a digital printing system or a vertical gatherer, a wire-stitching unit and a front cutter are predominantly used.
Fig. 7.2-74 Thread-sealing/folding machine with upstream folding unit (Heidelberg)
Wire-Stitching Devices in Gatherer-Stitchers. The tool for stapling in gatherer-stitchers is called a stitching head. For each staple in a back-stitched booklet, one stitching head is installed. The stitching head has the task to cut the stitching wire coming from a spool to staple size,form it into staples, and push it through the binding margin. Underneath the stitching head, a staple plate is located © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Fig. 7.2-75 The principle of wire-stitching and types of staple closures
Staple head
Staple arm
Block
that is responsible for closing the protruding staple arms. Alongside conventional stitching heads that are installed in the gatherer-stitchers of various manufacturers, special designs exist, in particular for high performance gatherer-stitchers. In all stitching heads the same actions are carried out for shaping the staples (table 7.2-22). Buckling stresses arise when the wire arms are pressed through the block. The buckling stresses increase, the harder the paper to be processed and the thicker the block. If the buckling tolerance of the sta-
Table 7.2-22 The function of stitching heads/tools in gatherer-stitchers
Forcing through
Types of staple closures
Closing
ple (which is also dependent on the arm length) is lower than the book resistance, the staple snaps prior to the staple closure. This shortcoming is counteracted by use of a thicker and/or stiffer wire. Stitching wires are distinguished by shape (round, square) and by cross sectional dimension. An additional feature of stitching tools is the shaping of eyelets in the staple head in the stitching tool as a means of collating the product. There must be no relative motion between stitching head and block during stitching. For this purpose,
A transport roller couple Transport rollers transports the wire from the cutting cartridge into a groove of the bending block that opens to the front. A disk knife cuts and separates the wire so that a staple Cutting cartridge section is produced. From the wire spool While the bending block Bending rod holds the staple section, the staple is shaped between the bending rods.
Wire
Bending block
Staple The driver presses the staple into the block after it has first pushed the bending block away from the staple.
Driver Block Support
Staple arm
In the lower position of the driver, the two bending wings produce the staple closure under the block. Bending wings
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Stamp
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7 Print Finishing Processes
• the inserted block is stationary under the stitching station or • with high performance machines, flying stitching heads are used (see also sec. 2.1.3.4). Stitchers in Forwarding Shops. For forwarding processes the following distinction must be made: • Devices and units for individual construction. Stitchers and wire-stitchers are used for short runs and single-piece production. They are equipped with one or two stitching heads and a stitching table for wire-stitching on the side which can be converted into a stitching saddle. Stitchers process pre-shaped staples with differing arm lengths and, if necessary, different staple head shapes (eyelets), which are inserted into the stitching head as staple packages. Stitchers are offered with various grades of automation. • Book modules for gatherer-stitcher lines. The finishing of four-page print sheets into back-stitched booklets of up to 100 pages per block is produced in workflows in forwarding shops. Here, different from usual production, the nonfolded sheets are collated. In a stitching and folding unit, the two wire staples are pushed into the binding margin and the block is folded. After fold pressing, the front of the block is trimmed. Stitching heads that work from wire spools are used.
7.2.6
Trimming
7.2.6.1 Characterization of the Process Trimming 3 Blocks for hardcovers and brochures are cut on one, three (or four) sides to the final format, whereby the closed fold edges on the head, foot, and front side of the block are eliminated, if this is intended for the product. Materials and partial products to be processed are (see also table 7.2-23): • • • •
bound book blocks, multi-layer brochures, back-stitched brochures, leaf assemblies.
Bound blocks can be provided in one-up or two-up form (see fig. 7.2-41). In the case of small-format products more than two copies can be bound as multipleups (arranged on top of one another). Folded products or mailings are already trimmed to their final size during folding. In job bookbinderies, the trimming of individual products or small editions takes place mainly on guillotine cutters. 7.2.6.2 Trimming Book Blocks and Brochures Blocks produced in two-up production must be separated into one-up products prior to trimming. Trimming machines are differentiated according to the cutting principle: Knife cutting principle: Machines using the knife cut are designated as • three-knife cutters/trimmers. With this principle flat knives work against a cutting bar. The block does not move. On three-knife cutters, multi-layer blocks for hardcovers and multi-layer brochures are trimmed. Shear cut principle: Shear cut machines are classified under: • Trimmers, which work with a flat upper and lower knife whereby the block does not move during cutting. • Cutting drum machines, which work with a flat upper and lower knife whereby the block is moved against the upper knife during cutting. • Rotary cutters, which cut a shingle product stream with a pair of center slitters at each cutting edge. Shear cut machines are designed for the trimming of back-stitched brochures. Separating Two-Up Blocks into One-Up Blocks. Industrial bookbinderies use nonstop saws to separate two-up blocks (fig. 7.2-76). The two-up blocks (usually coming directly from the binding line) are separated in the feeder magazine, aligned, and conveyed through the machine on transport belts. The 1.5 to 3.0 mm wide circular saw has carbide-tipped teeth and runs at a rotational speed of greater than 3000 revolutions per minute. Since most of the two-up productions are imposed based on “come and go,” one of the © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
separated blocks must be turned around the head or foot edge so that all the blocks are in the same position for the subsequent finishing processes. Three-Knife Trimmer. Three-knife trimmers produce an even cut with high precision. The effective block height ranges from 70 mm to 150 mm depending on the type of machine. Several blocks can be trimmed simultaneously (above one another). The machine consists of the following function groups:
Table 7.2-23 Products created by trimming
• Feeder. Die blocks aligned in the feeder magazine are separated into piles (usually 1 to 5 blocks) and passed on to the transport device. • Transport system.The blocks are transported into the trimming station by means of grippers and pushers. From there, they are conveyed by pushers on transport belts. • Cutting station (fig. 7.2-77). The cutting station consists of a pile pressing unit and the cutting system that produces the front cut followed by the head and foot trim. When changing the format, the
Intermediate products
End products
Book blocks for hardcovers and brochures with protruding flaps
Multi-layer brochures
Leaf assemblies, which are bound after trimming (four sides)
Single-layer brochures
Multi-layer and single-layer brochures, which receive a further feature after trimming, such as a colored edge, attachments, or a jacket
Fig. 7.2-76 Saw for the separation of two-up blocks (Kolbus)
Circular saw Feeder, Two-up blocks
Transport system
Fig. 7.2-77 Characteristic structure of cutting stations using three-knife trimmers (Kolbus)
Cutting system (3 knives)
Block feeding Front cut
Delivery Pressed pile
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7 Print Finishing Processes
pressing unit (imposing surface with board matrix to even out the pressure) must be changed in the same way as the cutting table that holds the cutting. The trim requires two operating cycles per cut. To produce a smooth cut, the knife motion takes place according to an optimized movement function (oscillating diagonal cut) towards the block spine or the front cut. If the knife motion goes towards the front cut, the installation of a scoring device is necessary to trim multi-layer brochures in good quality. The scoring device opens the brochure covers along the cutting edge, otherwise the cover material might tear at the brochure spine. The cutting knives are either made of high alloy steel, or the cutting edges are carbide-tipped. • Removal of shavings. In order to achieve the required precision of the cut and an even cutting surface, the knives must be regularly replaced and sharpened. Usually this takes place when starting a new job. Even when using sharp knives, cutting errors cannot be eliminated, in particular when processing overly high block spines with cutting tolerances of greater than 1 mm. A further lack of quality is the skewed nature of the cuts to the block spine. The principal causes for this are imprecisely bound blocks (skewed block spines, uneven block spines). The nominal output of three-knife trimmers lies between 30 and 120 piles/min. Three-knife trimmers are predominantly integrated into binding lines. If, in one area of production, only hardcovers are produced, it is advantageous to locate the three-knife trimmer at the beginning of the book finishing line. Trimmers. Since trimmers are generally interlinked, the machine parameters have to be compatible with those of the gatherer-stitcher. These are: • cutting capacity up to 20000 products per hour, pile trimming, • input height up to 15 mm, • long knife life from shear cut against fixed lower stationary knife. The required cutting capacity is achieved through the low product input height, the cutting principle, and the separation of the front and head/foot trim in two stations. The upper knives are fixed on a vertically oscil-
lating knife holder which is guided through four or six columns. The cut is a parallel cut with obliquely engaged knives. For processing two-up blocks, splitting knives can additionally be installed in the head and foot-cutting station. The blocks are transported with their backs facing forwards to the transport system of the trimmer, aligned in the front trim station and cut. The transport cycle corresponds to the oscillation time of the knife holder. In the second cutting cycle, the head and foot trim is executed. The cuts can be carried out in one clamping position of the transport system. Drum Cutters. Drum cutters were developed for the interlink with drum gatherer-stitchers. The backstitched books are fed individually into radial take-up cassettes of a rotating drum cutter for the head and foot trims and are pressed there. The pressing plate in each cassette is designed as a lower knife. For cutting, the products run past two stationary “upper knives.” They are then removed from this drum and routed into the front trim drum. In a further variation, drum cutters are offered as one-drum trimmers. The use of the drum conveyance principle (shortest transportation paths) and the kinematic reversal of the cutting movement the output could be doubled compared to conventional trimmers. Back-stitched brochures with a thickness of up to 12 mm can be trimmed. Continuous Trimmers. Continuous trimmers serve to trim rotary folded products with a thickness of up to 4 mm. A product stream is transported into a cutting station with rotating, carbide-tipped circular knives and trimmed at the head and foot during the transport movement. The front trim is carried out in a second rotary trimming module that is arranged at an angle of 90° to the first one. For the front trim, the product stream must be rearranged so that the front product edges make up one of the shingle edges. The unit is capable of trimming up to 100 000 products per hour and can therefore be coupled with web offset printing presses.
7.2.7
Edge Treatments on Books and Brochures
7.2.7.1 Characterization of the Process The term “edge treatment” summarizes operations carried out on trimmed book blocks or brochures that improve the functionality of the product. However, in © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
the first place they serve to improve the aesthetic appearance of the overall product. Edge staining/coloring The application of a colorant or a metal foil on one or three cutting surfaces of the book block to improve the aesthetic appearance and/or to protect the block. Attaching a bookmark One or more fabric ribbons are glued to the block spine and inserted between the leaves of the blocks. Rounding spine Bringing the bound sheets or leaves in a position so that the block spine becomes a part of a cylindrical shape. Adding headbands Adding a thin strip of cotton or silk to top and bottom of the block spine is referred to as headbanding. Furthermore, the • die-cutting of registers on the open cutting edges, • creation (die-cutting, cutting) of openings in the binding or parts of the binding, and • drilling of holes in the block are also assigned to the edge treatment processes. Materials and partial products to be processed are: • • • •
book blocks, multi-layer brochures, back-stitched brochures, bound or non-bound leaf assemblies, and
Additional materials for • Edge staining: dyes, metal foils, • Attaching a bookmark: textile bookmark, glue, • Headbanding: Headbanding with a single or multiple-colored boarder, glue. After the edge treatment operations, book blocks are converted into hardcovers and multi-layer brochures. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2.7.2 Process Sections of Block Edge Treatments Providing a Colored Edge (Edge Staining) Originally all book block edges were covered with gold foil for aesthetic effect and to protect them from climatic influences. Nowadays the colored edge is solely a design feature in industrial binderies. For the most part only a head staining is carried out. Common types are: • metallic coating, • closed colored edges. Gold, silver, or aluminum (together with colored coating) are used for metal-like edges. Machines for producing metallic edges work with cylindrical rolls of multi-layer foils. The carrier, a heat-activated separating layer, the coating and metal layer, and a thermoplastic adhesive layer are constituents of the foil. The foil is pulled over the cut surface and sealed onto it applying heat and pressure. The wax separating layer makes it possible to remove the carrier from the metal layer. After the sealing process the coating layer must be broken up, this means that the cohesion of the metal between the book sheet edges is neutralized. The closed colored edge is used with approximately 10% to 15% of hardcovers and less than 1% of multi-layer brochures. Mineral inks (finely ground minerals) bound with glue are used. These inks form sediment if they are not constantly kept in motion. Therefore mixersettlers are installed in the ink application units. Figure 7.2-78 shows a frequently used edge coloring machine. The machine can be integrated in production lines. It is important that the ink layer is applied thinly, otherwise the ink could peel off when the book is opened. Paper with bad absorbency must be primed prior to application of ink, since otherwise the cutting edge becomes blotchy (with glue water or alum water). For this
Multiple feeding in non-interlinked operation
Inking unit with agitator
Infrared dryer Block head
Fig. 7.2-78 Edge coloring machine, head trim (Kolbus)
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purpose the machine can be equipped with a second inking unit.
• sticking the upper bookmark section onto the block spines with hot-melt adhesive.
Inserting a Bookmark Edition covers are seldom fitted with bookmarks (mainly used in reference books, specialized books). The bookmark should be of such a length that it can comfortably reach diagonally across the page to be marked (fig. 7.2-79). Figure 7.2-80 shows the structure of a bookmark inserting machine. It can be integrated in production workflows. The bookmarks are transported in the block divider (maximum of four ribbons). During transportation the ribbons are inserted into the block. After that the following elementary processes are carried out:
Rounding and Backing the Block Spine Most hardcovers with a block thickness greater than 15 mm are rounded and backed as shown in figure 7.2-81 (see also fig. 7.2-88). Rounding and backing
• cutting the book marks to size, • inserting the loose bookmark section into the block foot trim; the end of the mark blown to the side is pushed into the foot trim by a slide,
The backing edges are put into the linings of the book cover, whereby the binding obtains additional stability. The height of the backing edge should correspond to the thickness of the book cover. The optimum
Glued to the block spine
• make the build-up of the block spine when binding beneficial for the assembly process, • improve the block stability (the tensions caused by reshaping bring the block spine back to its specified shape after usage of the book), • increase the binding strength, • improve the opening properties of books.
Backing edge height of block Diagonal line 454 Block spine
2 cm 3 cm
shallow fold for edition bindings Rounding height of segment Position of the cover fold
904
deep fold for job bindings
Bookmark
Fig. 7.2-81 Rounded and backed book block
Fig. 7.2-79 Bookmark in book block
Fig. 7.2-80 Principle of a bookmark inserting machine with the example of inserting two bookmarks (Kolbus)
Foot trim
Slide (for turning over the loose end of the bookmark)
Bookmark dispenser Bookmark holder (travelling)
Top bookmark gluing unit Blast air nozzle Bookmark cutter Block divider with ribbon guide © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
height of the rounding segment is (0.15–0.2) ¥ block thickness. The roller rounding principle is generally accepted for machine rounding processes (fig. 7.2-82). In the rounding operation, two rotating rollers press the block together and transport it simultaneously upwards. The rounding results from the different movement of the individual sheets. A swinging form tool “bends up” the back edges in the backing station while the block is held by pressing jaws. The two stations are connected in sequence in the machine (fig. 7.2-83). Rounding of a perfect binding block is troublesome, since the adhesive reacts elastically to the straining strength. Therefore the adhesive must be made plastic by heating up (40 to 60 °C) and if necessary, by adding water (adhesive sources). Attaching the Headband Headbands are decorative bands on the upper and lower edge of the book block spine. The woven bands colored on one edge are approximately 1 cm wide. It is difficult in machine processing to place the narrow bands
precisely on the block spine. Because of this, headbanding in machines is combined with the backlining of the block (fig. 7.2-84). The backlining process stabilizes the block spine additionally. The headband is stuck to a backlining paper web, which is the height of a block. The web is fed crossways to the block, cut into strips the width of the spine, and these are positioned on the block spine. Headbanding units are usually elements of book production finishing lines. Edge Treatment Operations in Production Lines In traditional bookbinding the process sequence is such that optimum product quality is ensured when the operations are performed correctly (fig. 7.2-85). For the setting up of production lines for edge treatment processes those operations relevant for the majority of jobs must in particular be taken into account. These are rounding and backing, headbanding and backlining, casing in, and book forming. The operations seldom required are arranged non-interlinked in
Fig. 7.2-82 Operations and tools for rounding and backing (example)
Roller rounding principle
Fig. 7.2-83 Configuration of a rounding and backing machine (Kolbus)
Backing principle
Rounding station Feeder Delivery Backing station
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Headband Backlining paper
Block
Circular knife for the edge Headband
Gluing unit Backlining paper
Fig. 7.2-84 Principle of headbanding by machine (Kolbus)
Trimming
Buffer storage
Rounding and backing
7.2.8
Case Making
7.2.8.1
Characterization of the Process
Importance of Covering The term “covering” (or cover) stands for a design element that is a durable integral part of graphic products. They are connected inseparably or separably with a “block.” In contrast to the cover, packaging is solely conceived as protection for the product during dispatch. The purpose of covers is:
Gauze Gluing unit
front of the workflow. Edge staining must take place (even if this might mean a loss of quality) prior to rounding (fig. 7.2-86). In complex binding lines edge staining and inserting the bookmark are integrated within the flow production. Since these operations are only required for some jobs and do not always have to take place at the same time, they are connected parallel to the main product flow (fig. 7.2-87).
Coloring the cut (edge staining)
• protection of the block without fundamentally affecting the usability of the printed contents, • to describe the contents (e.g., title, author, abstract),
Inserting a bookmark
Gauzing Headbanding
3
Fig. 7.2-85 Sequence of process sections for optimal product quality in block edge treatment
Rounding
Flow line
3
Gauzing
Headbanding
Fig. 7.2-86 Rarely needed (unlinked) process sections for block edge treatment arranged in front of the flow line © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Bookmark insertion Product switch Gauzing
Three-sided trimming
Rounding
Headbanding
Edge coloring Fig. 7.2-87 Parallel arrangement of rarely needed process sections for block edge treatment
• as an advertising medium for the book or other products, • as an object of art which represents an aesthetic image in harmony with the internal and external design of a product. The cover designs listed in table 7.2-24 are used in print finishing. The book cover is the most costly covering for graphic products. Normally it is made up of (fig. 7.2-88) • two stiff covers for protecting the block pages, • a flexible spine insert to protect the block spine, • the book covering material, which at the same time forms the opening hinge.
The differences in covers due to the design, advertising, and economic aspects are mainly achieved through variation of type and color as well as different decoration of the book cloth. Figure 7.2-88 shows the cross-section of a hardcover, which demonstrates the connection of book block and book cover. The endpaper is used as a joining element in the case of edition binding. Book Covers Several operations must be carried out to produce the book cover, which is made up of various materials. Trimming cases to size Cases are cut to size from plates, sheets, or reels.
Cover design
Type of product
Structure
Book cover
Hardcovers
Consists mainly of several parts made of stabilizing and surface material, inseparable connection between block and cover
Cover
Brochures
Consists mainly of one part made of surface finished cover stock, inseparable connection between block and cover
Protective jacket, advertising jacket
Hardcovers, brochures
Jacket around an end product of printed, surface finished paper
Slip carton, cases
Hardcovers, brochures, sheet assemblies
Consists of several parts with stabilizing and surface material or one-piece folding construction, loose leaves. Sturdy protective boxes for bound or unbound graphic products
Files
Sheet assemblies
Consists mainly of several parts made of stabilizing and surface material, carrier of a binding mechanism, separable connection between block and file
Folders
Sheet assemblies
Consists mainly of one part made of surface finished cardboard, carrier of a binding mechanism, separable connection between block and folder
Table 7.2-24 Cover designs © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
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7 Print Finishing Processes
Flexible spine insert
Cover
Connecting the block and cover via the endpaper
Brochure Covers Brochure covers mainly consist of cover stock of various quality. When decorating, the cover stock is printed and finished prior to finishing the product. The product can be embellished in the following operations: • single-layer or multi-layer, full-surface and/or partial coating, • laminating with foils, • foil stamping/embossing.
Headband Book covering Book block Fold (opening Endpaper hinge of the book) Fig. 7.2-88 Book cover construction
Casing in Assembling the book cover by joining the cover parts. Case decoration The cover is embossed and/or printed. The decoration is used for information and/or for aesthetic design of the binding. P
Producing openings Openings in the covers are produced by die-cutting, which results in an improvement of the product usability (e. g., handle holes or windows). Materials/sub products to be processed: • • • •
board in the form of plates, board inserts in reel form, book cloth in sheet or reel form, closing mechanisms for holding sheets.
Further design variants can be achieved by • folding flaps, gluing with a protective cover, • different connection variants with the block. Possible design variants for multi-layer brochures are illustrated in table 7.2-25. Comparable constructions can be applied for back-stitched brochures. In the recent past a large number of cover designs as well as variations for jointing the cover to the block have been developed along with more traditional forms. These developments aim to offer impressive products with good handling, which come close to the binding in appearance and functionality and in production close to the brochure. The following process steps are necessary to manufacture covers: Trimming covers Covers are cut from printed and finished cardboard plates on guillotine cutters. Usually one plate contains multiple ups. Producing openings Openings are produced in the covers by diecutting, which results in an improvement in the product’s usability (e.g., window). Materials/partial products to be processed are printed and finished cardboard plates.
Additional materials: • adhesives for joining the case, • embossing color, blocking foils for decoration, • rivet for joining the closing mechanism in the cover. Products produced in casing-in processes are book covers for hardcovers and files.
Products produced in cover production processes are brochure covers, folders, and jackets. 7.2.8.2 Producing Book Covers The case consists of flexible design elements (in the spine and fold area) and two rigid, robust covers. Therefore, it is possible to cover the spine area and the covers © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Table 7.2-25 Brochure cover constructions (block generally produced in perfect binding; similar design for back-stitched brochures)
Illustration of brochure forms
Explanation
Simple brochure form, creased twice A heavier stock cover cut to size is wrapped around the block during perfect binding. Adhesive
Cover
Brochure with a cover creased four times A cardboard cover cut to size is creased in the perfect binder and glued to the spine and to the side of the block. Remark: Creasing is generally performed outwards, as shown. It can, however, also be done inwards.
Lining strip
Lining strip brochure Two creased cover sheets are put onto the block as cover and rear leaf. The block is backed with a textile book lining strip.
Flap brochure Before the perfect binding process, the side parts of the cover are scored and folded to double “cover parts”. Two passes in the perfect binder are necessary.
Swiss brochure A cardboard cover (protruding, if necessary) is tucked around a lining strip brochure. Strip gluing is only done on the block spine. Jacket
(Protective) cover brochure A protective cover is put around a cardboard brochure and glued to the rear side of the cover. The flaps can be also glued.
with two different kinds of material (flexible and robust on the spine, covering and smooth on the covers). Materials for Book Covering Conventionally produced covers with one covering material are designated as full binding, covers with two covering materials as half binding. The traditional classification of book covering is done according to the number and type of covering materials and designation of the spine covering (table 7.2-26). © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
The use of soft PVC (polyvinyl chloride) as a covering material led to a different type of design since the material’s properties do not allow it to be easily glued and turned. The plastic sealing cover was developed with which the stabilizing material (board) is enclosed between the PVC trims. This takes place by means of high frequency sealing machines (commonplace today in folder production). The simplest variation of the PVC cover is the flexible one-part cover. The pretreated soft PVC blanks (usually finished in
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Full binding covers
Half binding covers
Leather full covers Fabric full covers Full paper covers (paperback)
Leather half binding Fabric half binding
The cover is a 4-part construction (fig. 7.2-89)
The cover is a 6-part construction (fig. 7.2-90)
Table 7.2-26 Classification of book covers (examples)
screen printing beforehand) are glued to the block endpaper. Conventional covering materials can be classified into: • animal skins (leather, vellum), • fabrics (book cloth). Cotton and rayon fabrics serve as a base material that is produced in various kinds of weaves (linen binding, map binding, etc.): – natural fabrics (usually laminated with paper in order to stop the cover glue from “seeping through”); – finished fabrics, that is, the fibrous fabric is dipped into a finishing agent; – layered fabrics: as layering material, PVC is mainly used. • Paper in the specifications: – natural paper from various fibrous base materials. Paper is currently used most often for the production of covers; – coated paper: PVC or polypropylene is a commonly used material. • Fiber felts: felts can be refined like fabrics. Board (various thicknesses) is used for the spine insert and the cover (spine insert = center strip or lining strip). The grammage of center strip varies from 200 to 500 g/m2, whereby the “heavy” center strip is used for books with straight spines and the “light” for rounded books. The cover board thickness depends on the book dimension. Cover Productions For the production of covers dimensional constraints exist that are based on the dimensions of the book block. Technological requirements are: • three operations for the production of full binding covers (fig. 7.2-89),
• five operations for producing a half binding cover (fig. 7.2-90). The case making process includes the following operations: • Trimming the cover material Cover, center strip, covering cutting; • Case making Assembly of the cover parts into a case for full and half binding covers; • Cover decoration Embossing and/or printing of the case; • Shaping covers Bending covers and rounding spines takes place during book finishing. Trimming Covers. Boards are delivered as plates (sheets) that must be trimmed to the cover size. Here, attention must be paid that the grain direction of the cover is parallel to the block height (quality!). Board plates are usually cut on circular saws. Modern casecutting machine units are equipped with an automatic feeder, two angularly aligned circular knife subassemblies, and an automatic delivery. Recently, board cutters have come onto the market on which the cross cut is designed as a chop cut. Cutting Covering Material. Fabrics and felts are delivered in rolls. Paper is generally delivered in sheets. The correct grain direction is desirable on covering materials, too. Due to the high cost of material, however, this requirement is often ignored and the covers are cut out of the material in such a way that a maximum exploitation of webs/ sheets comes about. Usually both long grain and short grain covers are processed in one print run. Guillotine cutters are used to cut the lining paper. Roll material is processed into book cloth cuttings by means of special fabric cutters in which the lengthways cuts are carried out by circular knives and the crosswise cuts as chop cuts. Cutting Spine Boards. Spine boards are delivered on rolls. The rolls are divided into narrow webs. Final formatting takes place in the case making machines. Case Making Case making is a complex process with the following elementary operations: © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
7.2 Process Steps and Procedures for Print Finishing
Fig. 7.2-89 Operations for producing a full binding cover
1. Sticking on the cover
Case
Fig. 7.2-90 Operations for producing a half binding cover
3. Folding in the sides
Spine insert Covering material (center/lining strip)
1. Case and spine board on spine cover
Spine cover 4. Fold in head and foot
• separating and pasting the covering material with glue; as glue, “quick setting” colloidal pastes (dextrines and/or skin glues) are used, • separating the covers and the precise positioning of the covers on the pasted covering material, • cutting center strip and positioning on the covering material, • tucking in the flaps at the top and bottom and pressing down the flaps, • pulling in the corners, • tucking in the side flaps, • pressing and delivery of the joint covers. Case making machines produce between 30 and 120 covers/min. Figure 7.2-91 shows a technological principle of a case making machine
2. Fold in spine cover
Base case 5. Fold in sides
3. Base case with coverings
Coverings
common form of ornamenting is cover embossing. Typical embossing processes are illustrated in figure 7.2-92. During embossing, a plastic shape alteration of the cover material is achieved by means of a die (normally brass engraving). The effect is supported by heat energy. The most commonly used process is foil embossing. The principle of foil embossing can be seen in figure 7.2-93. Embossing machines in edition bookbinding are equipped for ink and foil embossing. Embossing presses can be arranged modularly one after the other; corresponding to the number of modules, several embossing operations can be carried out in one machine pass.
7.2.9 Refining (Ornamenting) Book Covers For refining covers, the covering materials are either printed before case making (e.g., screen printing, offset printing) or ornamented after case making. The most © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
2. Folding in the foot and head
Book Finishing
7.2.9.1 Characterization of the Process The book finishing process contains the assembly of partial products (book and brochure blocks,book covers,
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Fig. 7.2-91 The working principle of the case making machine (Case making machine DA85, Kolbus)
Spine board Cover Side flaps Tucking the flaps
Pulling in the corners
Pressing, delivering
Covering material
The packing operation, which is also part of the book finishing process, is described in more detail in section 7.2.10.
Ornamenting processes in bookbinding
Colored embossing
Foil embossing
Blind embossing
Relief embossing
Fig. 7.2-92 Decorative operations in a bookbindery
inserts, jackets), which have been produced separately from one another, into the end product. The process steps are: • joining of book block and cover to a fixed binding, • joining of finished supplement products into cases, blocks, or books, • inserting enclosures, • attaching book jackets.
Fig. 7.2-93 The use of embossing foils for book cover ornamenting
Casing-in Casing-in is the colloquial description for the adhesive binding of book blocks and book covers. Traditional description: Inserting. Inserting is the joining of block and cover by adhesive binding of the outermost endpaper and the covers. The casing-in of books is defined as the adhesive binding of a hardcover to the book block. The outermost endpapers must be glued to the covers (gluing). The adhesive binding of the bound multi-layer brochure block to the cover is described as the casing-in of brochures. Smashing Smashing (pressing) describes the stabilization of the adhesive binding through surface pressing after the casing-in operation.
Die Thickness > 100000 products per job). The main binding process is perfect binding with hot-melt adhesives. They are produced in one-up. The principal distinctive features are their large format inserts, and a high sheet volume. • Paperbacks. Paperbacks are book products in smallor medium-sized print runs (< 20000 products). The principal binding process is perfect binding with plastic dispersion, hot-melt, or PUR (polyurethane) adhesive. The preferred sheet layout is the two-up. Special features include lean production methods and stack packing. Multi-layer brochures are produced on perfect binding lines. When investing in these production lines, the person undertaking the project can choose from an assorted range produced by various manufacturers, so that the respective system is very precisely tailor-made to the parameters of the product structure. During this process aspects relating to product quality and the positioning of the system in the workroom (including the temporary storage of the folded sheets) must be considered in addition to efficiency. Catalogs Catalogs are similar to magazines. The high volume of sheets entails high stock throughput on the binding line. Therefore the folded sheet logistics are particularly important. If the printshop and the bindery are accommodated on the same production site, it is expedient to install a disk-type temporary storage system. In most cases the folded sheets are wound onto reel cores at the gravure printing press. The unwinding of the folded sheets is done for each signature at the gathering machine. The technology enables a press delivery structure with a low operator requirement and the efficient feeding of the binding line. The perfect binder, as the basic unit, should have a high effective output. Special equipping of the perfect binder is not necessary. The adhesive must be suited to the type of paper used. Failure to take the grain of the paper into account may lead to production problems and impair quality. Trimming is a weak point of the line. Individual trimming is necessary for thick catalogs. In this case, the use of a second, parallel connected three-knife trimmer is essential. It is customary for inserts to be inserted into the bound brochure, and there is a growing tendency for catalogs to be personalized and addressed. © H a n d b o o k o f P r i n t M e d i a, H . K i p p h a n ( I S B N 3 - 5 4 0 - 6 7 3 2 6 - 1 )
The catalogs are packed individually in shrink film. High-capacity automatic palletizers or industrial robots are provided for delivery. The installed buffers, which isolate the process in the event of production stoppages, are particularly important for the efficient operation of the line. Paperbacks A binding line for paperbacks is shown in figure 7.3-26. Paperbacks are produced as “come and go” twoups (see fig. 7.2-41). Two-up folded sheets are usually printed on “book webs”. Virtually double the binding output is achieved with this procedure in comparison to one-ups, with the number of impressions remaining unchanged. Paperback bookbinding is simple in its outfit. Consequently paperback lines can be designed with lean technology. The sheet stack (bundle) is the usual medium for the temporary storage of folded sheets. There are often additional functional groups installed in the perfect binder, which enable the production of lay-flat brochures. Lay-flat brochures are given an additional spine lining. The block to cover connection is made by strip gluing on the backing strip overlaps. Since the circulation volume of each print job is limited, the installation of a medium-range perfect binder will suffice (8000–10000 products per hour). A particular consideration is the short set-up time, because the line usually has to be changed several times a day. After binding, the two-up product has to be separated. This is done in a separating saw. Squaring of the brochures is done at the same time. In the example a bundle packing with shrink film is intended. 7.3.2.6 Production Lines for Hardcovers Hardcovers are the traditional print finishing products that have been subjected to most changes in their history and the development of which is still not been completed. Their aesthetic form is a cultural asset, which gains in importance in spite of the progressing virtualization of communication technology. The following should be mentioned as typical representatives of industrially manufactured hardcovers: • Technical Books. Technical books are often produced in the form of hardcovers with medium to high page volume (>50 sheets/block) and short print run levels (